Walker County Messenger

The haters are still wrong

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of native-born workers.”

Kelly’s statement reflects a monumental ignorance of both economics and history, but he is only channeling the woefully warped mindset of President Trump, whose mother was born in Scotland and who has married two women from Eastern Europe. Like his chief of staff, the president embraces anti-immigrant attitudes rooted in fabricatio­n, not fact; emotion, not evidence.

Trump doesn’t care about facts, because his real motivation is pure political opportunis­m: fanning the fears of supporters who yearn for a more white, less diverse country with fewer neighbors from what Trump famously called “s---hole countries.”

When John Feeley, Trump’s ambassador to Panama, quit in disgust, he wrote in the Washington Post: “I am convinced that the president’s policies regarding migration are not only foolish and delusional but also antiAmeric­an.” He is right, but Trump’s anti-immigrant crusade has only gotten more determined and more dangerous. Here are four examples:

-- Abandoning Dreamers. A recent Harvard-Harris survey found that 76 percent of voters say that Dreamers, about 700,000 undocument­ed young people brought here as children, should be granted a path to citizenshi­p. But Trump has torpedoed every attempt at a legislativ­e compromise and no permanent solution is possible without his assent.

-- Encouragin­g family separation. On the day that Melania Trump introduced a program to help children, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced a “zerotolera­nce” policy for anyone caught trying to enter the country illegally. That means parents who are arrested at the border and sent to prison would be separated from their children, who are barred by law from incarcerat­ion.

The New York Times reports that at least 700 youngsters have been taken from adults claiming to be their parents since October. Michelle Brane of the Women’s Refugee Commission told the Times: “The idea of punishing parents who are trying to save their children’s lives ... is fundamenta­lly cruel and unAmerican.”

-- Ending protected status. About 300,000 immigrants who fled natural disasters and civil strife in Haiti, Honduras and El Salvador enjoy Temporary Protected Status under a program enacted in 1990 that allows them to stay in the U.S. Trump has canceled the program and ordered the migrants expelled, even though many of them have planted deep roots here and produced an estimated 273,000 American-born children.

The president rejected the advice of senior diplomats who encouraged him to keep the program because, as the Washington Post reports, “Money sent home by Central Americans and Haitians living in the United States is an engine for job creation that reduces the pressure to go abroad.”

-- Deporting workers. The Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency has stepped up raids on businesses that hire undocument­ed workers, making about 1,200 arrests since Oct. 1, which is up from about 300 during the previous fiscal year. This comes at a moment when the agricultur­al sector is plagued by a severe labor shortage. The Wall Street Journal documented the crisis in the crab industry on Maryland’s eastern shore and quoted a local fisherman, Burl Lewis: “It trickles all the way down the line. The Mexican labor creates jobs for Americans. It’s creating my job.”

President Trump, with John Kelly’s backing, is following an immigratio­n policy that is not just “foolish and delusional (and) anti-American.” It also directly undermines the country’s economic future.

Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail. com.

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