Business Insider
By Hunter Walker
August 6, 2015
Sen.
Marco Rubio of Florida and former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida are
generally seen as the top-tier Republican presidential candidates most
open to reforming the nation's
immigration laws.
Some
activists, however, say Rubio has a "fatal flaw" embedded in his
immigration policy that ensures reform will never happen if he makes it
to the White House.
Frank
Sharry is the founder and executive director of America's Voice, a
group that was founded to serve as the communications hub of the
immigration movement. He practically
seethed when Business Insider asked him about Rubio's immigration plan.
"It's
unf---ingbelievable to me that this hasn't been exposed," Sharry said.
He later added, "He's usually mentioned in the same sentence with Jeb
Bush, and there is no
relationship to the reality."
Rubio
was previously seen as a staunch ally of the immigration-reform
movement. In 2013, he was one of the four Republicans in the bipartisan
Gang of Eight who crafted
a comprehensive immigration-reform bill in the Senate. Rubio has
reportedly highlighted his work on that legislation to curry favor with
pro-business donors who support immigration reform.
The Gang of Eight passed the Senate, but the Republican-led House never took up the legislation.
Rubio
has since abandoned comprehensive immigration-reform legislation for
what he describes as a more realistic approach. His current plan calls
for dealing with border
security and illegal hiring before other components of reform —
changing the green card and visa system, or addressing the approximately
11 million immigrants who don't have permission to be in the US.
Alex
Conant, the communications director for Rubio's campaign, described
this shift when Business Insider asked him about the criticism from
immigration-reform activists.
He said the failure of the Gang of Eight bill showed the need for a
different strategy.
"The
all-or-nothing approach will continue to leave immigration-reform
advocates with nothing," Conant said. "The only way to fix our broken
immigration system is to first
secure our borders."
Sharry
dismisses this as "campaign-oriented tortured doublespeak." He said it
is designed to help Rubio maintain support from pro-reform members of
the business community
and Latino voters without angering the conservative base in the crowded
GOP primary.
"He
wants people to think he's for reform when, in fact, his approach means
no reform ever," Sharry said. "He's doing this so he can say to donors
and to Latinos, 'I'm
with you,' and say to conservatives who are angry at him for working on
the Gang of Eight bill, 'I'm with you.' ... The right loves it, because
they know that immigration reform will never happen under his plan."
Rubio
most recently outlined his immigration policy at the Voter's First
Forum in New Hampshire on Monday, when he said there was "only one way
forward" on immigration
reform.
"It
would require three steps, and they have to happen in the following
sequence," Rubio said. "First, we have to prove to the American people
that illegal immigration
is under control. It's not good enough to just say we're going to pass a
law that will bring it under control. People demand to see it."
Rubio
went on to outline the various security and enforcement measures that
would be part of this first step that would assure people "illegal
immigration is under control."
"They
want to see the fence completed, they want to see more border agents,
they want to see more drones and cameras, and ground sensors," Rubio
said. "But they also recognize
that over 40% of the people in this country illegally entered legally
and overstayed a visa.
"That's
why we need an electronic verification system that employers must
comply with or they will be heavily fined," he added. "And that's why we
need an entry/exit biometric
system at our seaports and airports so that we know when people are
overstaying visas and we can identify them. That is the key that unlocks
the ability to make progress on anything else when it comes to
immigration."
After
this first step, Rubio said he would "modernize our legal immigration
system" so it is based on "merit" rather than whether someone has family
members living in
the country. The final step of his plan, he said, would be finding "a
reasonable way to address the fact that you have 12 million people
living in this country or more who are illegally here but have been here
for a long time."
"They
will have to pass a background check, they will have to pay a fine,
they will have to start paying taxes, they will have to learn English,"
Rubio said of immigrants
who lack proper documentation. "In exchange for that, what they will
get is a work permit that allows them to legally work in the United
States and travel, and that's all they will have for an extended period
of time. And then at some point in the future,
we can have a further conversation about whether they're allowed to
apply for a green card."
Frank
SharryAPRep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Illinois), speaking in 2013 at a
briefing to call for reform of the immigration system. At left is Frank
Sharry, founder and executive
director of America’s Voice.
Sharry
said the issue with this proposal was that Rubio would not do anything
to change the legal-immigration system or provide a pathway to
citizenship for immigrants
who live in the country illegally until his package of security
measures is approved.
"His
major point is that once we prove that we've secured the border and
that we've eliminated illegal hiring, then we should deal humanely with
the 11 million people
here, and I prefer citizenship not just a permanent block on citizenship," Sharry said of Rubio's plan.
Though
Sharry said Rubio's stated openness to a pathway to citizenship for
immigrants who lack documentation "arguably puts him in better shape
than Jeb," he added that
this difference was meaningless because of the three-step sequence
outlined by the senator. Sharry said the security measures Rubio set as a
barrier to immigration reform would be unable to pass in Congress.
"That's
like saying, 'As soon as I gorge on food this week, my diet is going to
be so good,'" Sharry said. "The idea that we're going to pass
legislation ... the idea
that he would get Democrats in the immigration-reform movement to
support doing all the things Republicans want in exchange for down the
road maybe doing something for the 11 million? ... I don't give a s---
whether he's for citizenship at that point. What
he's for is enforcement only."
Sharry
said passing the security measures without pairing them with reform
would require a filibuster-proof Republican majority in both houses of
Congress. Even then,
Sharry is skeptical Rubio would have the support of pro-reform
Republicans. As a result, he said, Rubio's first step would create an
impossible barrier to the latter parts of his plan to potentially change
the way the US allows immigrants into the country
and create a pathway to citizenship for those living in the country
illegally.
"He knows that's bulls---," Sharry said of Rubio. "That's what's so maddening to me."
Furthermore,
Sharry argued the Gang of Eight bill previously backed by Rubio
included substantial security and enforcement measures along with the
reform elements. The
reason Republicans were ultimately overwhelmingly opposed to that bill,
Sharry said, was the path to citizenship.
"I
mean, oh my god, the Senate bill had $46 billion in border-security
resources," Sharry said. "It required metrics to be met that were
extraordinary. It would have an
employment-verification system that would be a new labor-market norm
and implemented nationwide on a mandatory basis. It had entry/exit
systems at the airports that security hawks can only dream of. But they
said no to that ... They liked the enforcement.
They don't want to say yes to legalization."
Not
all immigration-reform advocates are as pessimistic about Rubio. An
activist with a prominent immigration-reform group who asked to remain
anonymous because of ongoing
work with members of both parties told Business Insider it was
"important not to discount" the "enormous amount" of work Rubio did on
the Gang of Eight bill. Because of this, the activist predicted Rubio
would return to a more pro-reform position if he is
able to survive the Republican primary.
"I
will disagree with a lot of people in the immigrants' rights base," the
activist said of Rubio. "I just see this as more as political
expediency, and I see him as like
more of a future potential ally again than probably other people will."
Still, after Rubio's comments at the Voters First Forum on Monday, the activist was left "shocked."
"Honestly,
when I saw that quote — I mean that quote was kind of hard to imagine,"
the activist said. "It was so bad .... We have to secure the border
forever 100%, and
we have to finish the fence. We have to do all these things, and then,
only after do we think about the legal-immigration system. And then,
only after that's totally done do we think about the undocumented. If
he's actually being serious about that, that's
what — like a 20-year proposition we're looking at here?"
The activist described this as a "fatal flaw" in Rubio's plan.
It
would first prevent immigration reform from being enacted under Rubio.
And, the activist said, it would have a disastrous effect on the
economy, as stepped-up enforcement
without reform would cause deportations that would remove "a couple
million people from the economy" — including "half of all the farm
workers in the country." It would also block businesses from hiring more
skilled foreign workers, which many in the tech
sector have said is a major concern.
"I
think the fatal flaw is twofold," the activist said. "One, like the
policy, there is no way, no pathway to success of getting all the
components of immigration reform
done the way he's laid them out from a coalition policy perspective.
"Secondly,
even if I grant some insane possibility that it could get done, the
idea that our country is best served by telling 11.5 million people to
wait another couple
decades before they can get permanent legal status and wait another
decade until they can get something? The idea that our agriculture
system or Silicon Valley is going to be better off if we say we can't do
anything to help entrepreneurs until we can set
up this massive interior security deportation mechanism? ... It just
doesn't make sense ... It's just bad policy."
While
the activist still holds hope Rubio will shift if he emerges from the
Republican primary, the activist described his comments at the Voters
First Forum as "crazy."
The activist also said Rubio's current plan actually made him "worse"
than much of the GOP field on immigration reform.
"It's
crazy how bad it is. Like really crazy," the activist said. "What he
said the other night was really bad compared to almost everyone who
spoke."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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