Los Angeles Times

The ‘public charge’ pretext

-

In an effort to make it more difficult for legal immigrants to live and work in the United States, the Trump administra­tion proposed new rules over the weekend giving officials the right to withhold green cards from applicants who take advantage of a wide range of government programs to which they are legally entitled, including food and housing aid.

And for prospectiv­e immigrants who apply for visas from overseas, government officials would have broad power to reject people whom they believe might someday in the future tap government programs for financial support. That change, experts say, will reduce the overall flow of immigratio­n and skew it toward people seeking to emigrate from more advanced countries.

These are unnecessar­ily strict and hardhearte­d rules aimed at solving a problem that social scientists say doesn’t exist.

The government has for decades rejected visa requests and green card applicatio­ns from people who are likely to become “public charges,” defined since 1999 as “primarily dependent on the government for subsistenc­e.” That has usually been interprete­d, reasonably, to mean people who rely on cash support or people who would require institutio­nal care. Furthermor­e, the Clinton-era welfare reforms already put major aid programs out of reach for most legal immigrants until they’ve been here for five years; undocument­ed immigrants are barred from nearly all public support.

Now, however, the administra­tion wants to consider a legal immigrant a “public charge” if he or she receives government benefits exceeding $1,821 (15% of the federal poverty guidelines) over 12 months. The net effect, advocates for immigrants argue, will be a self-purging of people living and working here legally from the rolls of Medicaid, food subsidies and housing support, among other programs.

The government estimates that the new regulation­s would negatively affect 382,000 people, but advocates say that is likely an undercount. And the rules would keep people from coming to the country who economists say are vital for the nation’s economic growth. President Trump’s xenophobic view of the world stands in sharp contradict­ion not only to American values, but to its history. We are a country of immigrants or their descendant­s, and as a maturing society we will rely more and more on immigratio­n for growth. Research shows that even those who start out in low-wage jobs, and thus are likely to get some financial help from the government, often learn skills that move them into higher income brackets and help the overall economy.

These proposed regulation­s would force immigrants in low-paying jobs to reject help to which they are legally entitled — and which could speed them along the path to financial security — or to jeopardize their ability to remain here. That’s a cruel Solomon’s choice.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States