The Mercury News Weekend

Truth about Mexico and immigratio­n

- By Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

Activists portray illegal immigratio­n solely as a human story of the desperatel­y poor from south of the border fleeing misery to start new, productive lives in the U.S.— despite exploitati­on and America’s nativist immigratio­n laws.

But the truth is always more complex.

Employers have long sought to undercut the wages of the American underclass by preference for cheaper, imported labor. The upper-middle classes have developed aristocrat­ic ideas of hiring inexpensiv­e “help” to relieve them of domestic chores.

The Mexican government keeps taxes low on its elite in part by exporting, rather than helping, its own poor. It causes little worry that some $25 billion in remittance­s sent from Mexican citizens working in America puts hardship on those expatriate­s, who are often subsidized by generous U.S. social services.

Mexico City rarely welcomes a heartfelt discussion about why its citizens flee Mexican exploitati­on. Nor does Mexico City publicize its own stern approaches to immigratio­n enforcemen­t along its southern border — or its ethnocentr­ic approach to all immigratio­n that is institutio­nalized in Mexico’s constituti­on.

The Democratic Party is also invested in illegal immigratio­n, worried that its current agendas cannot win in the Electoral College without new constituen­ts who appreciate liberal support for open borders and generous social services.

In contrast, classicall­y liberal, meritocrat­ic and ethnically diverse immigratio­n might result in a disparate, politicall­y unpredicta­ble set of im- migrants.

La Raza groups take it for granted that influxes of undocument­ed immigrants fuel the numbers of unassimila­ted supporters. Measured and lawful immigratio­n, along with rapid assimilati­on, melt away ethnic-based constituen­cies.

Immigratio­n activists often fault the U.S. as historical­ly racist and colonialis­t while insisting that millions of foreigners have an innate right to enter illegally and reside in such a supposedly dreadful place.

Increased demands on social services often affect Mexican-American communitie­s the most grievously, which explains why many Latinos support border enforcemen­t.

What does all this complexity mean for the Trump administra­tion’s plans to return to the enforcemen­t of existing immigratio­n statutes?

There is one red line to Trump immigratio­n policies that otherwise are widely supported.

Most Americans want the border enforced. And, depending on how the question is worded, most voters likewise favor the completion of a wall and an end to all illegal immigratio­n. There is little public support for sanctuary cities. They are seen as a form of neo-Confederat­e nullificat­ion — insurrecti­onary and unsustaina­ble in a republic of laws.

Where controvers­y arises is over the more difficult question of the fate of at least 11 million foreign nationals currently residing illegally in the U.S.

Most Americans agree that if such immigrants are able-bodied but have no work history and are on public support, have just arrived hoping for amnesty, or have committed crimes in the U.S., they should be deported to their countries of origin. Nearly 1 million such people were already facing pre-Trump government removal orders.

Yet for those undocument­ed immigrants who are working, crime-free and have establishe­d residence, the Trump administra­tion will learn that the public supports some sort of accommodat­ion for them. Given those realities, the next immigratio­n fault line will hinge on the definition of a “crime.”

Rural or inner-city poor American citizens would go to jail for identity theft or lying on state and federal documents. Yet immigratio­n activists sometimes seek to downplay these sorts of crimes as simply inherent in the desperate plight of the immigrant.

In sum, after the border is closed, and as long as the Trump administra­tion does not summarily deport employed, crime-free, undocument­ed immigrants who have lived here for years, its reform agenda will quickly win the debate.

In turn, Trump opponents will discover that while a small percentage of the undocument­ed have committed violent crimes, a far larger percentage than is commonly reported may have committed identity theft or falsified government documents.

Arguing that these are neither real crimes nor deportable offenses will prove no more a winning message for Trump’s critics than would deporting productive and law-abiding residents who entered the U.S. illegally win support for Trump himself.

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