4/23/2015 - Matt Vespa Townhall.com
Earlier this week, California Democrats said
they’re preparing to give illegal immigrants a host of new rights and
privileges, one of which flies in the face of federal law. It’s a feel good
moment with zero foresight–and it does a disservice to immigrants, according to Ruben Navarrette, Jr’s. article in the Daily
Beast.
The Golden State has already passed measures,
like granting illegals the ability to have driver’s
licenses, but this goodie bag seeks to create a new
state position–the Office of New
Americans within the governor’s office–provide them with subsidized health
care, and restrict businesses using E-Verify during their employment processes.
Yes, this proposal is a train wreck waiting to happen, especially with the
health care and E-Verify provisions [emphasis mine]:
At a news conference in
Sacramento, a group of Democratic legislators—switching back and forth between
English and Spanish—recently unveiled a package of 10 bills that would, among
other things: create an Office of New
Americans in the governor’s office to better serve the undocumented;
provide illegal aliens with subsidized health care by extending Medi-Cal
coverage to all Californians, regardless of immigration status; limit use of
“E-Verify” (the government-run database that employers use to check if
prospective hires are legally eligible to work) and prevent “abuse” by
employers; and ban businesses from discriminating against residents based on
their immigration status, citizenship, or language.
That last one is a
beauty. If it extends to hiring, it flies in the face of federal law,
namely the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act that made it a federal crime
to knowingly hire an illegal alien. Now California wants to make it a state
crime to not hire one? Employers can now pick their poison: They can violate
one law or the other.
The health care
provision is the most expensive item on the menu, with a tab that was
originally set at $1.3 billion. Yet no one will say
where the money is supposed to come from in cash-strapped California.
Navarrette did mention that one of the bills
protects immigrants from being taken advantage of by lawyers, and provides them
with a toll-free number to report fraud to state bar. I agree with him that
keeping predatory lawyers accountable isn’t a bad thing, but he also noted the
many problems with these Democratic initiatives:
First, the undocumented
never asked for these things. I’ve interviewed dozens of illegal aliens over
the years, and they always say they want three things and only three things
from this country—a work permit, a driver’s license, and the ability to travel
back and forth across borders to visit the families they left behind. The rest
is just window dressing whipped up by politicians to serve their agendas, not
those of immigrants.
Second, these kinds of
legislative giveaways serve to legitimize unlawful behavior. It’s still a
crime—correction, a civil infraction—to enter the United States illegally or
overstay a visa and we shouldn’t be embarrassed about saying so. Every time we
chip away at the infraction of trampling our borders—whether it’s by pressuring
media companies to stop using the phrase “illegal immigrant,” or showering the
undocumented with things they didn’t even ask for, we make it more socially
acceptable to be an illegal alien.
How is that in the
national interest? And what incentive does it provide others to come to this
country legally? For that matter, what incentive does it give the undocumented
to attempt to change their status if there ever is anything resembling
comprehensive immigration reform? Why bother if, thanks to well-intentioned but
misguided Democratic legislators in California, you’re already comfortable the
way you are?
As Erika Johnsen wrote on Hot Air,
California was nowhere
near a balanced budget in early 2014. Moreover, we
know immigrants come to America for work, not to vote. Nevertheless, it’s
probably safe to assume that California Democrats want some political dividends
from these initiatives. Yet, if there is no incentive to assimilate, apply for
legal status, or become citizens–how will Democrats accomplish that end goal?
Then again, let’s also not marginalize the fact
that illegal aliens have broken federal law. They may pay property, sales, and
even income taxes in some cases through Tax Identification Numbers, but the
point that Navarette makes about how this only diminishes the offense for folks
who arrive illegally by “trampling our borders” is disconcerting in the
extreme.
One of the many functions of a nation is to
protect its territorial integrity–and it seems Washington has moved
sluggishly in defending that principle. And that goes
for both parties. Nevertheless, save for the common sense provision that
protects people from slimy lawyers, these proposals are just detached from reality.
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