The Hill (Op-Ed)
By Ian Smith
June 22, 2015
“What
about Ag?” As a veteran Capitol Hill staffer recently told me, that’s
the question invariably asked of members of Congress whenever they put
their support behind
a bill promising for better immigration enforcement or stronger border
security. The power of the ‘Big Ag’ lobby (‘Ag’ is short for
‘Agriculture’) was put on display recently when it came out in full
force against Rep. Lamar Smith’s Legal Workforce Act, a
bill that would make mandatory the monumentally sensible and wildly
popular E-Verify program—Sen. Grassley introduce its companion bill last
month—Although a major player, Big Ag’s certainly not the only lobby
with outsized influence over immigration policy;
they’re merely in the top ten.
Perhaps
no other policy area is so thoroughly dominated by such a juggernaut of
special interests as immigration. From the corporate lobbyists, like
the Chamber of Commerce,
the Big Tech firms and the National Association of Homebuilders, to the
religious and ethnic lobbies, like the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops and the National Council for La Raza, it’s little wonder the gap
between what the American people want versus
what they get on immigration policy is wide enough to drive a truck
through.
Traditionally,
lobbying’s been a greater concern for liberals and on occasion they do
take aim at the corporate influence on immigration policy.
Unfortunately, it’s usually
from one side. This was observed recently by an immigration
expansionist outfit called ‘Grassroots Leadership.’ In their new report,
Payoff: How Congress Ensures Private Prison Profit with an Immigrant
Detention Quota, the group attempts to document how private
prison corporations have “profited handsomely” from Homeland Security’s
mandatory detention quotas because, as they allege, the industry
contributes millions of dollars in lobbying expenditures and campaign
contributions “to ensure their interests are met.”
Assuming there’s a connection between detention quotas and lobbying
dollars, any honest immigration analyst knows it would be mere trifles
compared to the real immigration profiteers.
Combing
through FEC data between 2008 and 2012, the transparency group the
Sunlight Foundation found that other industry lobbyists Grassroots
Leadership neglected to report
on—e.g. Big Ag, Big Tech, and the construction industry—spent $1.5
billion pushing Congress to implement immigration expansionist measures
of various kinds. And as the Sunlight Foundation points out, this $1.5
billion figure was spent in an off period for
immigration activity; right in-between the demise of the McCain-Kennedy
legalization bill of 2007 and the follow-up bill that was pushed by the
Gang of Eight throughout most of 2013. In the four-year span, just for
immigration, there were 6,712 quarterly lobbying
reports filed by 678 lobbying organizations in 170 sectors mentioning
987 unique bills.
The
influence game in immigration might be big; but that it could be
dominated by a few private prison companies that want more detentions
(which, it should be added,
means they probably want porous, not secure, borders) instead of the
corporate employers that want lower labor costs any fourth grader
knowledgeable of the basic facts would find totally absurd.
That
Sunlight’s finding went nowhere with liberal lobbying critics should
eviscerate anyone’s faith in the power of persuasion on the immigration
issue. How could Democrats
not believe that mass immigration grinds down American wages given such
a financial assault mounted by Big Business? Corporate lobbying in this
area, immigration economist George Borjas calls, “the best piece of
evidence” needed to show that wages drop when
immigration rises. As he says, “why would employers tend to go to
Washington and expend their resources lobbying for something that
doesn’t benefit them?”
For
decades now, America’s been developing an immigration industrial
complex: a self-perpetuating machine whose gears are greased with
lobbying funds forever topped up
by slashed labor costs and increased consumption spurred on by record
high and rising population growth. Whenever pro-enforcement bills manage
to push through the tide, they’re either defunded or ignored. Take the
2006 Secure Fence Act that promised 700 miles
of fencing along the southern border but never got the funding. Since
then, both Saudi Arabia and Israel installed giant border fence projects
to deter illegal immigration mostly from Yemen and Eritrea,
respectively. The introduction and implementation stages
for both projects were quick, seamless and uncontroversial.
In
America, for veteran pro-enforcement folks concerned about the
dwindling middle class, it’s been, as the saying goes, like two sides
negotiating how to divide a pizza
while one continues to eat it.
The
negative effects of mass immigration and the interests behind them need
to be better understood among the American elite as well as the general
public. Other nationalities
are apparently far ahead. Last month, Bank of England chief, Mark
Carney, said it was indeed high immigration rates that have explained
subdued salary increases in the UK. In Vancouver, Canada (my hometown),
locals recently took to the streets to protest record-high
property prices, which analysts have pinned down to huge flows of new
immigrants from mainland China. Varying levels of anger have also been
witnessed in Hong Kong, Singapore and Sydney for the same reason.
Australia’s former Treasury Secretary, John Stone,
had this to say following two reports on immigration he wrote while in
power:
[I]mmigration
does not improve average Australians’ living standards, and that
long-standing argument for it has no substance. Our corporate
chieftains—including importantly
those controlling our media—find that conclusion unacceptable. More
immigrants mean more demand for their products, whether widgets or
newspapers. Thus, when the latter editorialise about the need for large
(and preferably larger) immigration programs “in
the national interest”, they should declare their own.
For
public officials in this country, Stone’s sentiment echoes the late
Rep. Barbara Jordan (D-Texas), who while leading the 1994 U.S.
Commission on Immigration Reform,
wrote, "Immigration, like foreign policy, ought to be a place where the
national interest comes first, last, and always.” That, right there,
should be the real bottom line for America.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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