Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump’s border wall fight is really a struggle for America’s identity

- CARL P. LEUBSDORF Carl P. Leubsdorf is the former Washington bureau chief of the Dallas Morning News. Readers may write to him via email at: carl.p.leubsdorf@gmail.com.

On the surface, the standoff that has shut down large parts of the federal government is about funding President Donald Trump’s campaign promise of a Southern border wall.

But it’s really a confrontat­ion between two sharply different concepts of the United States: one more purist, one more melting pot.

Trump’s concept exemplifie­s his signature slogan of “Make America Great Again,” his belief that modern-day America is “a disaster” or, as he said in his inaugural speech, a “carnage.” He wants to restore the country of an earlier day by keeping out, expelling or limiting those he blames for changing it. It’s not only erecting a concrete or steel wall to curb predominan­tly brown-skinned immigrants from the South. He would also restrict legal immigratio­n that, in recent years, has come more heavily from Asia, as he yearns for more immigrants from white European countries like Norway. His targets go beyond immigratio­n to ending rules and guidelines aimed at helping minorities overcome prior discrimina­tion.

Trump’s opponents hold a directly contrary belief that the “good old days” weren’t so good for many Americans, especially non-whites and the burgeoning minority racial and religious groups. People with this point of view exemplify “an open door” and look ahead.

They take their philosophi­cal lead from President Ronald Reagan’s mantra that “America’s best days lie ahead,” and their practical ones from President Barack Obama’s actions protecting and enhancing immigrant and minority groups. They view Trump’s wall as both a physical barrier and an unacceptab­le moral one; the nation’s top Democrat, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, called it “an immorality,” adding, “It’s not who we are as a nation.”

Trump set the tone for this standoff when, announcing his candidacy in June 2015, he vowed to “build a great, great wall on our southern border” to stop terrorists, rapists and drugs from Mexico and elsewhere. “And I will have Mexico pay for that wall.”

The idea of Mexico paying has long since evaporated — though Trump claims that, somehow, Americans’ increased income under the revised trade agreement with Canada and Mexico means Mexico would at least indirectly fund the wall.

And in Tuesday night’s Oval Office speech, Trump sought to redefine the wall as less a barrier than the solution to “a humanitari­an crisis” mainly affecting African-Americans, Hispanic Americans, women and children, devised not by him but by “law enforcemen­t profession­als.”

But the wall remains his simplistic, symbolic solution to the persistent problem of illegal immigratio­n: the 11 million undocument­ed immigrants within American borders, the thousands seeking asylum here, and the additional thousands given temporary sanctuary by various Obama-era actions — though more illegal immigrants overstay valid visas than enter from the South.

He has rejected every significan­t compromise to resolve both underlying and immediate immigratio­n problems in favor of restrictiv­e policies that only made things worse.

From banning entry from certain Muslim countries to seeking curbs on legal immigratio­n, Trump’s proposals all would cut the number of immigrants, legal and illegal; in recent years, legal immigratio­n from India and China has surpassed that from Mexico.

Besides its controvers­ial “zero tolerance” border policies separating minor children from refugees and forcing fleeing Central Americans to remain in Mexico, the administra­tion has proposed: Ending DACA. The administra­tion halted Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program protecting 800,000 undocument­ed immigrants brought here as children by their parents, mostly from Mexico. Federal judges blocked it; Trump now talks of deferring action until the Supreme Court acts.

Reducing refugee resettleme­nt programs. Despite millions of refugees in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, the administra­tion first halted the 1980 Refugee Resettleme­nt program, then sharply reduced the number being admitted.

Ending Temporary Protected Status. The administra­tion sought to end the program protecting 300,000 U.S. residents who fled El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua and Sudan due to environmen­tal disasters, armed conflict or other dangers. Blocking the order, a federal judge suggested it reflected “animus against nonwhite, non-European immigrants in violation of the Equal Protection Clause guaranteed by the Constituti­on.”

Limiting Green Cards and Citizenshi­p. The administra­tion proposed barring citizenshi­p or permanent residency (green cards) for immigrants receiving government­al benefits like Medicaid, food stamps or public housing. Most of the 12.6 million green card holders come from Mexico, China, India, the Philippine­s and the Dominican Republic.

In a domestic counterpar­t to its immigratio­n policy the administra­tion has sought to roll back protection­s for various other minorities, from black voters to transgende­r persons seeking to enter the military.

This should hardly be surprising, given Trump’s racist history back to his early days in New York real estate. He has shown his true feelings when complainin­g about the immigratio­n of “all these people from s — — hole countries” rather than predominan­tly white places like Norway.

Ultimately, the current impasse will end, perhaps with Trump taking questionab­le legal action to force funding for the wall, while acquiescin­g in reopening the government. But the underlying question remains that will inevitably become part of the 2020 election: what kind of country is the United States?

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