CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DON’T EXPECT MUCH ON IMMIGRATION THIS YEAR”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DON’T EXPECT MUCH ON IMMIGRATION THIS YEAR”
There’s one big reason why, no matter
how much happy talk you hear about “comprehensive immigration reform” from
President Obama and members of Congress, it’s unrealistic to expect much action
this year: This is an election year.
All 435 members of the House of
Representatives face reelection this year, as they regularly do every other
year. Until recently, once someone was elected to the House, he or she could
expect never again to have much intra-party opposition during primary
elections.
But that went out the window with the
advent of the highly ideological Tea Party organizations, which have not
hesitated to challenge and oust even the longest-term incumbents, including
Republican senators like Richard Lugar of Indiana and Robert Bennett of Utah.
This has a direct impact on the
potential fate of changes to America’s highly flawed immigration system this
year. For almost two-thirds of the current Republican majority in the House
comes from heavily gerrymandered districts where election of a Democrat is
highly unlikely.
The majority of GOP voters in those
so-called “red” districts tend to lean rightward, and the Tea Party is
strongest in those places. That means even if they are inclined to vote for a
limited pathway to citizenship for the millions of undocumented immigrants who
have been law-abiding residents after arriving here, doing so could amount to
political suicide. Republicans generally call any such plan “amnesty.”
Things are different, of course, for
Republicans like Jeff Denham and David Valadao, two Central California
congressmen with heavily Latino districts. The same for Republican Gary Miller
of San Bernardino County.
All joined the limited-amnesty camp
during the latter half of 2013, knowing it would make some of their
conservative constituents unhappy. But since the vast bulk of the GOP House
majority refused even to hold a vote on whether to allow the issue to come to a
vote on the House floor, where Democrats could have joined with a few
Republicans to pass significant changes, these men’s stances were never tested
by the need to cast an actual vote.
Chances
are the same will be true this year, unless Republican Speaker John Boehner is
willing to risk defying the right wing of his membership, as he at times hinted
he might while complaining about the Tea Party in late fall.
Despite
his complaints about what the far right of his party is doing to the overall
GOP, Boehner still shows no sign of allowing a vote on any comprehensive
changes. In late December, for example, he said “We have no intention of going
to conference on the Senate bill,” a reference to the bi-partisan compromise
passed by senators last June, which allows for a very arduous path to
citizenship. That means the speaker will not allow the House to vote on any
bill similar enough to the Senate’s version that it might merit an effort to
hash out House/Senate differences.
Instead, Boehner and other House
Republicans have spoken in oxymorons like this one: “We’re committed to moving
forward on step-by-step comprehensive reforms.” That’s an oxymoron because
nothing done step-by-step will ever be comprehensive.
But Boehner’s remark and some
subsequent statements may mean his House majority will accept some changes that
stop short of wide amnesty. He’s also hinted he might do something substantial
after the springtime filing deadlines for potential primary election candidates
have passed. After that, hard-line anti-immigration forces can’t mount as many
primary election challenges to incumbents.
Filing deadlines, of course, fall
within the next month or two in many states.
If those deadlines leave much of his
majority without opposition from even farther right than where they stand,
there could be some immigration action.
The most likely prospect is a
guest-worker bill to create a neo-Bracero program benefiting big businesses and
big farms which like to hire cheap immigrant labor, but don’t much care if
their workers ever become citizens.
All of which means that while the need
for immigration changes grows stronger by the day, it will never be the top
priority for individual Congress members. Most important to them will always be
their own survival, and that means the only changes that will pass will be ones
they see as no threat to them.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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