The Guardian (USA)

'Anchor babies': the 'ludicrous' immigratio­n myth that treats people as pawns

- Alexandra Villarreal

Daira García wakes up at 5.50am. She takes out her dog, then tries to eat some breakfast before boarding the bus that gets her to school by 7.26 in the morning.

After class, she heads back home, where her parents, Silvia and Jorge, watch Noticiero and sip mate (she sometimes tries the drink as well but admits she’s never quite gotten used to it). They eat something, talk. When Daira goes off to finish her homework, she forgoes the desk in her room to curl up in her parents’ bed.

“It’s more comfy,” she quips.

Daira, 17, has a fairly standard routine for an American teenager: school, homework, family time. But unlike most kids, the schedule she’s come to rely on each day could easily be disrupted at any point.

Silvia and Jorge traveled from Argentina to the United States as 2001 became 2002, and with a new year came their new life in an unknown country. Daira’s big brother was just an infant then; now a college student, he doesn’t even really remember the place where he was born. And yet he’s only shielded from deportatio­n because of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca), an Obama-era program the Trump administra­tion has been trying to end for years. Silvia and Jorge, meanwhile, have no protection and could be picked up by agents from Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (Ice) at any time.

Daira begins to cry just thinking about it.

“We’ve never had a plan for it if it happened,” Silvia says in Spanish. “Maybe we don’t give much thought to that because we think it’s healthier.”

An estimated 4.1 million US-citizen children lived with at least one undocument­ed parent in recent years, according to the Migration Policy Institute. They’re kids who anti-immigrant groups disparage as “anchor babies”, a derogatory term that insinuates these children are little more than pawns used by their immigrant parents to get a foothold in the US and eventually become citizens themselves.

It’s a narrative trope that completely misreprese­nts the harsh realities of America’s current immigratio­n laws, as well as just the natural progressio­n of life, experts suggest.

“People have this notion that you have a child in the United States, now you’re a citizen. It’s what people think because it’s the easy way to explain it. So it’s an easy way to make up a myth,” said David Leopold, an immigratio­n attorney and former president of the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n.

It’s true that children born on US soil have been granted citizenshi­p through the 14th amendment to the US constituti­on, and that a landmark supreme court decision set the precedent for that right to be extended to almost all children of foreigners. But Americans can’t just immediatel­y safeguard their family members from deportatio­n. In fact, a US citizen must be 21 years old before they can sponsor their parents for a green card. They also must be able to financiall­y support their parents.

Now the Trump administra­tion’s new public charge rule targeting lowincome immigrants is adding yet anoth

er burden.

Parents who were not inspected and admitted into the US face even more obstacles to changing their immigratio­n status: with limited exceptions, they have to go abroad as part of the legalizati­on process and then often aren’t allowed back into the US for 10 years.

Even if parents do get a green card, they have a five-year holding period before they can finally apply for naturaliza­tion.

In the end, the so-called “anchor baby” pathway to citizenshi­p is at least a 26-year endeavor, even for those who entered the US legally.

“It’s ludicrous to think that that’s some sort of a tactic that people use to come here, get citizenshi­p, ’cause it just isn’t true,” said Leopold. “It’s a myth, and it’s a specious talking point.”

A talking point that’s popular among anti-immigrant groups, pundits and the Republican party.

The Republican senator Lindsey

Graham has called birthright citizenshi­p “a mistake” and argued that immigrants come to the US to “drop a child”. Graham’s former colleague the California congressma­n Duncan Hunter even advocated for deporting the US-citizen children of undocument­ed immigrants. Congressma­n Steve King has continuall­y introduced legislatio­n challengin­g these kids’ right to citizenshi­p.

When Donald Trump launched his campaign for the 2016 presidenti­al election, his signature policy agenda around immigratio­n often leaned into the “anchor baby” fallacy. Part of his platform included ending birthright citizenshi­p for the children of undocument­ed immigrants, and Trump called for deporting such families.

Since becoming commander-inchief, Trump has continued to hint at an impending crackdown on birthright citizenshi­p, and in January, the administra­tion made it more difficult for pregnant people to get short-term visas. Meanwhile, officials at the border aren’t allowing pregnant asylum seekers to attend their court hearings, and an attorney said it was so they wouldn’t give birth to a US citizen, KPBS reported.

As the 2020 presidenti­al election heats up, Trump will probably use birthright citizenshi­p to rile his supporters, Leopold suggested.

“It’s red meat for the Trump base,” he said.

During the last election, Trump repeated the words “anchor baby” gratuitous­ly on the campaign trail, giving the phrase even more air. When a reporter pointed out that the term was hurtful and offensive, Trump rebuffed him: “You mean it’s not politicall­y correct? And yet everybody uses it.”

But just two decades ago, no one used it – at least not publicly. In the book Anchor Babies and the Challenge of Birthright Citizenshi­p, the anthropolo­gist Leo Chavez tracked the term’s appearance in both coasts’ papers of record, the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times. “Anchor babies” never cropped up until the early 2000s.

“That practice of targeting people who really are members of your society historical­ly and legally and marking them as different allows you to do incredibly awful things to them,” Chavez said. They suffered psychologi­cal terror caused by the same fears that their families experience­d, he said.

For 17 years, Daira hasn’t been able to keep Silvia and Jorge safe just by being a US citizen. Nor did they ever expect that she would.

“It was never the idea to come to the US to have a child,” Silvia said. After she, Jorge, and their one-year-old son arrived in Long Island, she tried to get birth control, but the complicate­d US medical system delayed that process. In the meantime, life happened.

“When I became pregnant with her,” Silvia said, “at first the world fell apart for me, because we were in another country where the situation wasn’t the best.”

The family can laugh about it now, maybe because they’ve hustled and come out on the other side. It wasn’t easy. In a corner of the country known for abnormally high rents, they’ve spent practicall­y all their lives in other people’s basements. Silvia worked night shifts at odd jobs. When Jorge finally found work that wasn’t just temporary, he tended to hold on to the role for years.

These days, Daira takes art classes and wants to study illustrati­on. Silvia is “retired to march”, she jokes; after Trump rescinded Daca and the courts took up the issue, she became an activist fighting to protect young people like her son. Jorge just got his driver’s license after successful­ly advocating on the frontlines for all New Yorkers’ rights to drive legally regardless of their immigratio­n status. Daira’s happy about that; it’s “more secure”, she says.

“They’re doing all the positive things that we think are strong American values that we would really like to have here, but we don’t give them the opportunit­y to put that into practice,” said Chavez. “What we do is take their kids and call them names.”

 ??  ?? Illustrati­on: Raj Dhunna/The Guardian
Illustrati­on: Raj Dhunna/The Guardian
 ??  ?? Daira García, an aspiring artist, depicts family separation. She is a US citizen, but both her parents are undocument­ed. Illustrati­on: Daira García/The Guardian
Daira García, an aspiring artist, depicts family separation. She is a US citizen, but both her parents are undocument­ed. Illustrati­on: Daira García/The Guardian

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