Los Angeles Times

ICE’s raids are political theater

- few times a week David L. Ulin is a contributi­ng writer to Opinion. By David L. Ulin

A,I visit the 7-Eleven in my mid-city neighborho­od to pick up a sixpack or a bag of snacks. What I see there looks to me like a pretty pure portrait of America. The place is open all hours and it serves all kinds: Parents buying after-school snacks for their children, laborers getting cold drinks on hot afternoons, neighbors stopping in for a few items before the evening meal. A family from India owns the franchise — mother, father, son and daughter, all of whom work long hours in the store.

On Jan. 10, U.S. Customs and Immigratio­n Enforcemen­t agents descended on 98 7-Elevens in 17 states, including California. It was a show of force that must have played well with the president’s anti-immigrant base. Although my mid-city outpost wasn’t targeted, a store in Culver City and three in Koreatown were. ICE didn’t detain anyone in Los Angeles, but 21 workers suspected of being in the country illegally were arrested nationwide.

“Today’s actions,” declared acting ICE director Thomas D. Homan, “send a strong message to U.S. businesses that hire and employ an illegal work force: ICE will enforce the law, and if you are found to be breaking the law, you will be held accountabl­e.”

Oh, come on. The raids were nothing but political theater, intended to terrify the most vulnerable.

According to news reports, the raided 7-Eleven owners will be “audited” for immigratio­n offenses, but such audits don’t require dramatic predawn raids and rarely result in successful prosecutio­n anyway. Business owners have access to lawyers, and it’s hard to prove they knowingly hired undocument­ed workers. Workers, on the other hand, can be deported with little or no due process.

It’s not that 7-Eleven owners and the company’s corporate leadership are without their issues. During the Obama administra­tion, several franchisee­s in New York and Virginia were indicted for running a scheme in which, according to then-Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch, “immigrant workers were routinely forced, upon threat of job loss or deportatio­n, to work upwards of 100 hours a week.”

Closer to home, a group of Southern California franchise owners sued 7-Eleven in 2014 for “aggressive and discrimina­tory” practices, which included taking away stores for minor violations and turning them over to new owners for higher fees.

Late last year, the National Coalition of Associatio­ns of 7-Eleven Franchisee­s filed another suit in California alleging additional coercive attempts at corporate control.

Still, 7-Eleven stores have long offered a positive vehicle for immigrants — especially South Asians — to ascend into the middle class. Franchise costs are relatively affordable, and in 2013, the National Minority Franchisin­g Initiative reported that 57% of the chain’s stores were minority-run. The result — as my neighborho­od store illustrate­s — can be a vivid demonstrat­ion of the American dream.

It seems incredible to have to remind ourselves, at this point in the history of the Republic, that immigratio­n and immigrants — with and without papers — are the backbone of the American economy. Again and again, research shows immigratio­n’s net positive economic effect. “Immigrants, we get the job done,” Lin-Manuel Miranda exults in the musical “Hamilton,” whose hero emigrated from the Caribbean island of Nevis on his way to helping found the United States.

Just two days before the 7-Eleven raids, the Trump administra­tion announced it would do away with Temporary Protected Status for 200,000 Salvadoran­s in the United States — “part of what appears an effort …,” argued a Baltimore Sun editorial, “to go nationalit­y-by-nationalit­y to show the door to Latino and Latina immigrants, legal or illegal.”

The day after the raids, the president made his blatantly racist comments denigratin­g Haiti, El Salvador and countries in Africa while torpedoing a fix for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

That none of this is particular­ly surprising — the president, remember, kicked off his campaign by calling Mexicans criminals and rapists, then began his presidency with the Muslim “travel ban” — makes it no less troubling, especially in California, which is, as of Jan. 1, a sanctuary state.

The California Values Act prevents police from asking about immigratio­n status or cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, with some exceptions. A related law allows employers to be prosecuted if, in state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra’s words, they “voluntaril­y start giving up informatio­n about … or access to their employees” without a warrant.

When Gov. Jerry Brown signed the laws, Homan responded that “ICE will have no choice but to conduct at-large arrests in local neighborho­ods and at worksites, which will inevitably result in additional collateral arrests.”

We have every reason, then, to see the recent raids as a signal of what’s to come — ICE agents swooping down on restaurant­s, car washes, convenienc­e stores and constructi­on sites.

Indeed, the San Francisco Chronicle reported last week that “U.S. immigratio­n officials have begun preparing for a major sweep in San Francisco and other Northern California cities in which federal officers would look to arrest more than 1,500 undocument­ed people while sending a message that immigratio­n policy will be enforced in the sanctuary state.”

Theater again, although not for those who are arrested. For them, this is all too real.

I never thought going to a convenienc­e store would become a political act, but here we are. I’ll keep supporting my local 7-Eleven, and any other franchise that gets raided.

It would be un-American — or un-California­n — to do otherwise.

 ?? Chris Carlson Associated Press ?? U.S. IMMIGRATIO­N and Customs Enforcemen­t agents during immigratio­n raids in L.A. on Jan. 10. Nationwide, 21 workers were detained on suspicion of being in the country illegally.
Chris Carlson Associated Press U.S. IMMIGRATIO­N and Customs Enforcemen­t agents during immigratio­n raids in L.A. on Jan. 10. Nationwide, 21 workers were detained on suspicion of being in the country illegally.

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