Imperial Valley Press

One important issue overlooked during the first debate

- JOE GUZZARDI Joe Guzzardi is a Progressiv­es for Immigratio­n Reform analyst who has written about immigratio­n for more than 30 years. Contact him at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org

After the first presidenti­al debate mercifully ended, Fox News analyst and moderator Chris Wallace called the free-for-all “interestin­g.” A better word is ugly.

Challenger Joe Biden sunk to calling President Trump names: “liar,” “racist,” “clown” and resorted to an unpreceden­ted presidenti­al political insult, “Will you shut up, man.” As for Trump, in some viewers’ opinions, he came off as unpresiden­tial. Add Wallace’s scolding, hectoring performanc­e into the mix, and the result is three losers. The hour and a half verbal brawl made a good case for canceling future debates, which would end once and for all the undignifie­d circus- like atmosphere that benefits no one, least of all voters.

If Trump is indeed trailing in the polls, assuming surveys taken by the never-Trump ABC and Washington Post are credible, then he needs to ratchet up his game. One of the top priorities among American voters is jobs, and to make his case Trump should revert to the issue that won him the White House in 2016: immigratio­n and its detrimenta­l effect on U.S. employment.

During today’s pandemic, about 30 million people are unemployed or under-employed. And this year, as per usual, about 4 million high school graduates will enter the labor market to look for jobs. The establishm­ent media and moderator Wallace’s unasked question is whether the existing immigratio­n policy -- 2 million immigrants legally authorized to work in the United States -- is fair to those millions of unemployed Americans or those hopeful teens. The answer is obviously no. Yet the mainstream media and office- seeking politician­s from coastto- coast consistent­ly refuse to enter the immigratio­n fray.

Although Trump has come up short on many of his 2016 immigratio­n promises, he’s given every indication that he understand­s the importance of hiring Americans as his 2017 “Buy American, Hire American” Executive Order proved. Biden’s website and his statements during the Democratic primaries indicate that he would expand immigratio­n and, therefore, create higher immigrant employment that would make it tougher for job- searching Americans.

Biden’s immigratio­n vision is radical. Among his anti-American worker proposals are to a) increase the high- skilled employment visa totals even though unemployme­nt is high in those sectors, b) preserve the fraud- ridden diversity visa lottery, a process that randomly selects 50,000 limited- skills immigrants each year that will compete for employment with struggling minorities, c) grant cities the authorizat­ion to sponsor new immigrants, a cheap labor bonanza and d) increase refugee admissions 700 percent.

First and foremost, however, Biden wants to grant amnesty -- and permanent work authorizat­ion -- to the roughly 12 million illegal immigrants currently residing in the United States. The 12 million new lawful permanent residents would eventually petition their family members which, at an average of 3.5 petitions per immigrant, means 42 million more people.

Biden is proposing a wide-ranging makeover of the U.S. immigratio­n system. But Biden should heed a cautionary note from his former boss, and a fellow immigratio­n advocate. President Barack Obama was specifical­ly critical about immigratio­n policies that went too far left, and suggested that adopting a policy to decriminal­ize illegal immigratio­n, as Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris has vowed, is an error.

“You go survey the average Democrat and they still think there’s such a thing as a border, and if you don’t speak to those values, then you may be in for a rude shock,” Obama once said. “The average American doesn’t think we have to completely tear down the system and remake it.”

For his part, Trump needs to put his central issue -- immigratio­n

-- to the forefront. The president can point to his ultimate successes in prevailing on immigratio­n issues that the courts challenged, namely imposing travel restrictio­ns on aliens from nations with ties to terrorism, finalizing agreements with Mexico and other Central American nations to deter illegal immigrants intending to defraud U. S. asylum policies, and dramatical­ly lowering refugee admissions.

Trump’s achievemen­ts mean fewer work permits, and more American job opportunit­ies. And that’s at least worth mentioning during the second debate.

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