The Ukiah Daily Journal

In immigratio­n debate, both parties put politics first and immigrants last

- Navarrette’s email address is ruben@ rubennavar­rette.com. His podcast, “Ruben in the Center,” is available through every podcast app.

SAN DIEGO >> The more you do something, the better you’re supposed to get at it. But that axiom doesn’t apply to talking about immigratio­n.

Republican­s can’t stop droning on about what they insist is an “invasion” along our southern border with Mexico. Their basic message: “The situation on the U.s.-mexico border — and U.S. immigratio­n policy as a whole — is a chaotic mess, and it’s all the fault of Democrats. Elect us, and we’ll fix everything.” That line is easier to buy if you’re not keeping score at home and don’t have a clear recollecti­on of the past. Things weren’t much better when Republican­s controlled the House of Representa­tives, the Senate and the Oval Office.

Oh, Republican­s talk tough on the campaign trail. But once in power, they take care of their benefactor­s in big business, whose only problem with illegal immigratio­n is there isn’t enough of it. Undocument­ed workers come in handy when employers combat labor shortages, caused by — among other things — the fact that many employers don’t treat their workers well or pay them enough.

Republican­s claim that their obsession with illegal immigratio­n is motivated by a devotion to the rule of law.

That’s laughable. Conservati­ves still downplay or refuse to investigat­e the horrific events of Jan. 6, when a pro-trump mob attacked officers from the U.S. Capitol Police Department and the Washington Metropolit­an Police Department and threatened in some cases to kill officers with their own guns.

Naturally. Nothing says “we love law and order” like killing cops.

Republican­s have long been at war with the rule of law. By taking employer sanctions off the table, Republican lawmakers have — during the crafting of immigratio­n reform bills in 1996, 2006-2007, and 2013 — protected those who break the law by knowingly hiring illegal immigrants.

Former President Donald Trump, a Republican, pardoned Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, the disgraced former Arizona lawman who was convicted of criminal contempt of court in 2017 for defying a federal court order. He also pardoned GOP political consultant Roger Stone, his longtime friend and “fixer” who was convicted of seven felonies related to the 2016 presidenti­al election.

What part of “illegal” do these people not understand?

The only reason that Republican­s keep talking about illegal immigratio­n is that they get lots of political mileage from the issue.

Republican­s scare White folks into thinking that hordes of brown folks are coming to invade their homes, rob them of their stuff, ravish their wives and daughters, get their kids

hooked on drugs and destroy their quality of life.

As if. Look around any well-to-do suburb in America, and you’ll quickly see why the No. 1 employer of illegal immigrants isn’t agricultur­e or restaurant­s but the U.S. household. Often, it’s brown people — such as immigrants from Mexico, Guatemala, or El Salvador — who make a better quality of life for White folks.

Instead of constantly shouting “Get out!”, a simple “Thank you” every now and then would be muy bueno.

Yet, Republican­s refuse to acknowledg­e the obvious: that many Americans are addicted to undocument­ed immigrant labor because it makes their lives cushier, that jobs currently being done by the undocument­ed would never be done by U.S. workers, that the U.S. economy would flounder without undocument­ed immigrants, and that Americans’ work ethic is weak but their sense of entitlemen­t is strong.

The more Republican­s talk about immigratio­n, the more sour notes they hit.

And what do Democrats do about this? Nothing. That is, they offer nothing in response. They just go to Latinos and say: “Vote for us. We’re not Republican­s.”

Oh, Democrats like to talk softly when they’re out on the campaign trail pandering to Latino voters. But once they’re in power, they swing a big stick. They rope local police into enforcing federal immigratio­n law, put refugee kids in cages, ratchet up deportatio­ns and militarize the U.s.mexico border. They also take care of their benefactor­s in organized labor, where many in the rank-and-file oppose higher levels of immigratio­n and legalizing the undocument­ed because they fear the competitio­n. All the while, Democrats do everything they can to avoid the accusation that they’re soft on immigratio­n — even if it means overcompen­sating by being extra tough. Confused about what to do, they often do nothing at all.

The last comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform bill worth its salt — the 1986 Immigratio­n Reform and Control Act — was signed into law by a Republican, for-mer President Ronald Reagan.

To paraphrase The Gipper, Washington is not the solution to the immigratio­n problem. It is the problem.

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