I was equal parts pleased and concerned by President Trump’s announcement last week that ICE would scale back its aggressive worksite enforcement in the agriculture and hospitality industries.
I was pleased because, on the narrow question, the president is entirely correct that “our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from” those employers. As with the administration’s efforts to remake American trade policy, it can be true not only that the status quo is unjust and unsustainable, but also that abrupt reversal of longstanding policy causes unnecessary costs and disruptions. Suddenly removing a significant share of the labor force, that an industry has relied upon for decades with the knowledge and acquiescence of the government, is fair neither to employers nor workers.
I was concerned, though, because the administration’s change in policy appears to go in precisely the wrong direction. Forswearing immediate worksite enforcement, with no clear plan for its long-term implementation, creates the perverse incentive for illegal immigrants to flood into those industries and reopens the door for those who might be thinking of crossing the border: get one of those “jobs Americans won’t do,” and you can probably stay. Telling employers they can keep their illegal labor so long as they need it removes any incentive for them to rethink their business models or invest in creating jobs that Americans will do.
We are stuck right back in the trap that has bedeviled policymakers for the past couple of decades. Most people recognize that the best way to enforce immigration law going forward would be to establish robust worksite enforcement. This would allow us to move toward a legal immigration system that prioritizes high-skilled workers. It would allow us to target penalties at unscrupulous employers. It would turn off the magnet attracting illegal immigrants into the country. And it would force many of those who should not be here to make their own arrangements to depart in an orderly manner with a minimum of roundups and litigation.
One one hand, flipping the switch on worksite enforcement is enormously costly in both economic and human terms, placing the person whom we have allowed to live and work and even raise a family here on the same footing as the person who crossed the border last week, or who crosses back and forth frequently, or who has committed a violent crime. We won’t create a stronger labor market by throwing millions of people out of it overnight. If the ultimate objective is strong families and communities, tearing either apart would be counterproductive. What’s most important for the economy is putting future immigration policy on sound footing.
But on the other hand, that sound footing depends upon strong enforcement beginning today, to make the promise of future enforcement credible. If the world believes, based on how the United States deals with its existing population of illegal immigrants, that future illegal entry will be rewarded as well, the nation will never have control of its labor market. Policy reform is impossible without secure borders and effective laws.
Mandatory E-Verify should be the cornerstone of labor market enforcement. U.S. policymakers already have a system, called “E-Verify,” that validates the legal status of American workers. What’s lacking is the political will to ensure its consistent use. Employers should have no choice; they should face penalties for employing illegal workers even inadvertently, and penalties for intentional and repeated offenses should be catastrophic and include criminal prosecution. The law should recognize that the employer who opts for illegal and exploitable labor and undermines the power of American workers is committing a far more serious and less excusable offense against the community than the illegal immigrant pursuing a better life. Aggressive deterrence of employer malfeasance constrains the labor supply directly and, by eliminating the job opportunities and thus much of the incentive for illegal immigration, offers an efficient means of addressing that challenge as well.
For immigrants already in the country illegally, policymakers need a solution that will neither send sudden shocks through the labor market and millions of lives nor signal lackluster commitment to enforcing the law. They should pursue an approach that has received little consideration from either side of the immigration debate: last in, first out (LIFO). Under LIFO, the more recently an illegal immigrant has arrived in the country, the sooner he must leave. Florida’s implementation of Mandatory E-Verify only for new hires is a good example of policy along these lines.
Ideally, those who have only just arrived, migrate frequently across the border, or have a criminal record would be barred from the labor market immediately. Those who have already resided in the country for up to five years would be issued a work permit that lasts for the same number of future years as the number for which previous residence can be established. And those the United States has allowed to settle in the country over five years or more would be granted a five-year work permit that could carry through until more transient groups have left as scheduled, the nation had demonstrated firm control over its borders and its labor market, and progress becomes possible on a permanent resolution.
This approach would deliver on the Trump administration’s priorities far more effectively than an announcement that certain industries are just off-limits to enforcement. It would also be a potent political package to put before Congress. Anyone screaming that straightforward enforcement of the law as written is inhumane and unacceptable would have the option of supporting a reform that would better address the predicament of long-time residents and better ensure enforcement going forward. Or they could admit they just don’t want to enforce the law against employers or improve conditions for American workers at all.
Hardened criminals, those with active removal orders, and recent arrivals under the lawless Biden regime were always going to be the sensible and beneficial focus for Trump’s deportation efforts. But the long-term health of the American immigration system, and better outcomes for American workers, depends upon pairing that upfront enforcement with a more methodical model for addressing decades of failed policy and securing the labor market against the possibility of future floods.
What must be avoided at all costs is acceptance of the argument from employers that they simply cannot operate their businesses without cheap, often illegal, or else temporary, labor. That’s the equivalent of the multinational corporations insisting that efforts at reshoring will lead to $3,000 iPhones and $300 toasters.
ICE deported 76 illegal aliens working at a poultry packing plant.
The CEO said there was “no pathway forward,” to replace all those illegal workers.
He should come to Utah (for example.)
When I came here 13 years ago I was amazed at how all those “jobs Americans won’t do,” in CA were being done by Americans in Utah!
Of course there is a pathway forward.
Just pay a wage American workers will accept.
It might take being understaffed for a bit, or, God forbid!, taking a slight salary hit to afford all those American workers, but, it will work out in the long run.
I bet threatening the CEO with a fine or prison stint over his past hiring of illegals will get his financial creative juices flowing.
OPERATION WETBACK opened jobs for millions of Americans 71 years ago. I knew many of them; then. Remember only most now.
I”worked the fields” to pay for college; as did many of my kin! Thanks to OPERATION WETBACK!
Ido have a dog in the fight!
1955 to 1963 17 cousins and i did “JOBS AMERICANS WONT DO!”!!!
We all grauated college BEBT FREE!
21 years ago when “W””justified” his OPEN BOARDERS GOVERNMENT with that statement I “went ballistic on NRO; using my name. Pointed out that I HAVE SHED MORE BLOOD FOR AMERICA THAN ALL BOOSIES COMBINED SINCE 1940! i immediately became
‘persona no grata” Herd from friends on 2 Boards that I should not look there for employment. NBD; on my way to retirement.
But I did learn that using my name was DUMB!
GWB likes me not!
It was personal 21 years ago Sure today he remembers me not.idorememberhim!
Still no type!
DO. REMEMBER HIM
Something extraordinary happened at that plant that got raided and had 76 illegals taken away:
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/omaha-immigration-workplace-raid-aftermath-rcna212931
“Jobs Americans won’t do,” my ass!
Hiring Illegal Aliens over able bodied American Workers should be a total Crime
If illegals were not here it could never happen! OPERATION WETBACK worked FOR AMERICA’S MIDDLE CLASS!
Just make up laws you will not enforce. Raise the level of welfare with no work or citizenship involved. Just make sure no one has a path out, dependent on the system, keeping sweatshops and the like running. Those missing kids….?
If you reward bad acts, like illegal immigration, you simply get more of it. Here’s an adaptation on the idea. In order to access the work permit, which is in essence a worker’s visa, the foreigner must self report himself and his family, pay a fine of $250 for each illegal entry (member of household) or attempted entry.3 If the individual has previously been fined for the same violation, the penalty can be doubled. This can be financed, if he has a credit record. Such visa would/does not provide a path to permanent residency/citizenship and the applicant must actively and explicitly waive such benefits. Minor children are not affected, but would be barred from sponsoring their parents if they become US citizens. Also, length of stay could be capped at 10 years, at which time they must be sponsored by their employer on a work permit, or return to their homeland and apply for a legitimate visa. As part of the bargain, they must admit to any and all false statements to government, including any misstatements on real or fabricated dependents, and pay restitution. Failure to do so, might result in repatriation once it is discovered… They must actively acknowledge that as guests of the Country they are not fully protected by first ammendment privileges and their status can be affected by protesting against the host government. Also, the usual causes for loss of status on a visa holder would apply to these guests such as engaging in criminal activity, etc… I would also include those “Dreamers” who have a clean criminal record in the same deal. They could then be reduced in number and legally repatriated if they are unfit to behave as a civil guest.
Agusto
Smart folk have known for thousands of years behavior punished is reduced; and rewarded is expanded.
BF Skinner “proved’ it with his very well documented experiments with birds/or rats in an OPERANT CONdITIONING CHAMBER. aka “Skinner’s Box”! reward a bird or rat for bell ringing and it will ring it again and again. Punish bird or rqt for bell ringing and the bell is avoided if at all possible.
This was done before you probably were born; 80 to 70 years ago.
Studied Skinner in grad school. IMHO he was a very smart man. But his belief in PUNISHMENT made many to label him as “harsh” and in some cases smear him; with what i think were lies. I really do no know.
eg.
Killers should be killed!
Sounds right to me; but I wore E.G. + A.
My comment is one of seeking a moderately tidy way to solve a few problematic circumstances.