Fortune (Opinion):
By Stephen Legomsky
April 1, 2016
In the U.S. and Europe
One of the most striking developments in global politics today is the
decline of traditional political parties. We’ve seen it in Donald
Trump’s stunning successes in the U.S. Republican presidential primaries
and in the dramatic gains that Germany’s far-right
party made in three recent state legislative elections. Several factors
could be driving this, but one common theme is the candidates’
anti-immigrant rhetoric, which highlights the complexities of companies
looking to do more business abroad.
To be sure, neither the parallels nor the worries should be exaggerated.
Public support for the Alternative for Germany Party still trails far
behind that of the more traditional parties, just as Donald Trump’s
supporters remain a distinct minority of U.S.
voters. But in Germany and the U.S., these minorities are large and
increasing. In both countries, increased support has shown up in actual
elections, not just opinion polls; voter turnout has been unusually
high; and first-time voters have heavily fueled
the success of these extremist factions. Perhaps most importantly, the
dominant mood of those voters has been an intense, visceral, and
sometimes violent rage.
The conventional explanation for this fervor is immigration. In the
U.S., Trump has publicly called Mexican immigrants “rapists,” though he
allowed that “some, I assume, are good people.” He promises to build a
wall along the entire U.S.-Mexico border. He would
ban all Muslims from entering the U.S. But what’s most alarming are the
tumultuous cheers he receives from huge audiences when he routinely
repeats these themes at campaign rallies. By contrast, in Germany,
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s pledge to admit 800,000
refugees fleeing for their lives from Syria was both morally
commendable and uncommonly courageous. But it has not played well with
voters and is most likely the largest single element in the surging
popularity of the far-right German parties.
Immigration,
of course, is not the only issue on the minds of these voters.
Hostility toward globalization generally and trade policies in
particular, especially in regions with high levels
of unemployment, has also fed these movements (and, to be fair, more
progressive movements as well). Moreover, one cannot pigeonhole all
supporters of either Donald Trump or the Alternative for Germany. But
there is no doubt that in both movements immigration
and refugee policies are front and center.
It
is easy to see why immigration policy triggers such powerful passions.
To varying degrees, people perceive immigration as a debate about
national sovereignty, national culture and community,
and the balance between national self-interest and moral obligation. In
the case of illegal immigration, people often see their nation’s
response as a test of its commitment to the rule of law. More
concretely, they think about race, religion, language, jobs,
wages, taxes, government services, crime, welfare, civil rights and
human rights, family reunification, education, integration, population,
the environment, national security, and foreign relations. This is an
explosive mix.
Yet
there is no one monolithic explanation for anti-immigrant anxieties;
different concerns drive different people. Some natives fear that
immigrants will compete with them for jobs or lower
their wages. Some worry that immigrants will be a fiscal burden on
already-strained national and local government budgets. It would be
unfair to dismiss all immigration opponents as racists, but equally
unrealistic to deny the outsized role that racism, xenophobia,
and religious and cultural differences have played for many
individuals, both historically and today. Some, perhaps, fear
Balkanization – the breakup of a nation’s people into multiple,
segregated enclaves.
The
sources of animus toward immigrants can also vary by country. While the
U.S. has been a country of immigration since its founding, large-scale
immigration to Germany is a modern and less
familiar phenomenon. Germany is also geographically closer than the
U.S. to the terrorism that afflicts the Middle East. And as part of the
European Union, Germany is less able to control the entry of
third-country nationals from neighboring states.
Germany,
of course, was not founded as a country of immigration. Today, however,
13% of its population is foreign-born — approximately the same
percentage as in the U.S. Turkish immigrants
have encountered particular hostility, and today refugees from North
Africa and the Middle East frequently experience the same. Though few
will deny the historical contributions of immigrants, a perennial
complaint is that today’s immigrants just aren’t of
the same caliber as their predecessors. Successive generations of
immigrants have all proved their detractors wrong.
If we are patient, they will do so again.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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