The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Border policies must be humane, too

It’s well past time to stop the outrage and respect the ordeals immigrants endure.

- By Carolyn Bourdeaux Carolyn Bourdeaux is a former member of Congress from Georgia’s 7th District. She is a contributo­r to the AJC Opinion page.

Republican­s have been quick to seize on the tragic death of Laken Riley. Her story is horrifying, and, as an instructor at UGA, I know the sorrow the community feels. We hold her family, her friends in our hearts.

But even as we grieve, the governor and Republican­s in Georgia are whipping up an anti-immigrant furor — and, by doing so, crushing any effort to reform our disastrous and tormented immigratio­n system. All of our immigrant families are about to get caught in this dragnet. We’ve seen this happen over and over again.

As someone who campaigned for years in one of the most immigrant-heavy districts in the country, issues around the border and immigratio­n were some of the most heartbreak­ing and frustratin­g that I encountere­d. I am not one to defend the administra­tion’s border policies — our borders must have integrity, and we cannot take everyone into this country who wishes to come. But I also believe we need to reform, streamline and increase legal paths to immigratio­n and citizenshi­p to this country.

I know the governor is going to go to immigrant communitie­s in Gwinnett and elsewhere and assure them he supports legal paths to reform. But that’s not actually the case. Republican­s love playing keep-away with Democrats on immigratio­n reform — why solve the problem when you can keep the situation at crisis pitch and reap the political rewards?

I personally saw it happen as I worked on immigratio­n bill after immigratio­n bill in Congress to address the bizarre and perverse problems in our system: (legitimate) refugees languishin­g without work permits in an economy starved for labor; children of immigrants from India who had lived in this country all of their lives but, merely because they were from India, faced deportatio­n at 18; Afghan refugees who had helped American soldiers in Afghanista­n but were unable to get into our country after we left.

I will never forget their relatives and friends, often soldiers who had served with them, desperatel­y showing me pictures of their black and blue bodies from the beatings at the hands of the Taliban — begging me to help before they were killed.

I will never forget sitting next to a Honduran man weeping as he told me about his brother who was deported to the gang violence of Honduras. His brother’s wife and children were raped, and his brother was beheaded and had his hands and feet chopped off. And this is just a taste of the stories I bore witness to and was so frequently infuriatin­gly helpless to resolve.

This is what our current immigratio­n system does to people. And every bill I worked on failed because the Republican leadership would not let the legislatio­n pass — not even tightly crafted bipartisan bills to help DREAMERS, documented DREAMERS, farmworker­s or Afghan refugees.

And we are seeing it happen again with the repeated failure of bipartisan immigratio­n reform to move through Congress now. President Joe Biden even went so far as to tell Republican­s they could have everything they wanted in border policy — everything — much to the fury of immigratio­n advocates on the left. And with one call from former President Donald Trump, Republican­s walked away. Again.

I’ve found that some immigrant groups like to think they are exempt or special. I remember visiting with members of the Vietnamese community in 2018, many of them staunch Republican­s. I raised my concerns with them about President Trump’s anti-immigrant policies, but they brushed me off with words to the effect that “our community came to this country legally.”

But it was not long before the Trump administra­tion proposed to revoke a special immigrant status for thousands of Vietnamese refugees and deport them to Vietnam, potentiall­y to poverty and imprisonme­nt.

Every person in Georgia who is an immigrant or has an immigrant in their family, or employs an immigrant or is friends with an immigrant or in any way is touched by our very diverse and dynamic immigrant communitie­s, needs to know: This is not just about the border, this is not just about an undocument­ed immigrant who allegedly killed a young woman, this is not just about “illegal immigratio­n,” this is not just about immigrants from Venezuela or Hispanic immigrants. This is about you.

The vast majority of Americans know we can have both a tightly secured border and a reasoned and humane immigratio­n policy. It has never been “either/or.” And our elected leadership owes it to the citizens of Georgia, the increasing­ly diverse citizens of Georgia, to avoid feeding the anti-immigrant outrage industry and fix our broken immigratio­n system.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP 2023 ?? Our borders should have integrity, and, Carolyn Bourdeaux writes, we cannot take everyone into this country who wishes to come. But she also believes we need to reform, streamline and increase legal paths to immigratio­n and citizenshi­p to this country.
ERIC GAY/AP 2023 Our borders should have integrity, and, Carolyn Bourdeaux writes, we cannot take everyone into this country who wishes to come. But she also believes we need to reform, streamline and increase legal paths to immigratio­n and citizenshi­p to this country.
 ?? ?? Carolyn Bourdeaux
Carolyn Bourdeaux

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