CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“LINES BLUR FURTHER BETWEEN CITIZENS, NON-CITIZENS”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“LINES BLUR FURTHER BETWEEN CITIZENS, NON-CITIZENS”
Almost no one seemed to notice last
month, when California’s new budget took effect, that yet another distinction
between citizens and non-citizens was breached. Voting now is about the only
area left with a clear line between legal immigrants and citizens. Even for the
undocumented, there are few privileges or rights they can't now enjoy.
The state budget signed by Gov. Jerry
Brown in the last days of June contributed its share to this blurring by making
immigrant children, regardless of their legal status, eligible for Medi-Cal,
the state’s public healthcare program. The expansion of care to under-18
immigrants will take effect next May, costing taxpayers approximately $132
million a year.
The budget also creates $380 million
worth of earned income tax credits for poor families who file tax returns, in
effect boosting the incomes of about 825,000 families by an average of about
$460 a year. Citizenship is not a requirement.
As of Jan. 1, legal immigration status
also ceased to be needed for getting a drivers license, although licenses for
the undocumented look different from those obtained by U.S. citizens and legal
immigrants.
Just one year earlier, undocumented
immigrants acquired the right to practice law under a bill signed by Gov. Jerry
Brown. They also can now serve as election workers at the polls, even if they
can’t vote. And this month in Huntington Park, undocumented immigrants were
appointed to seats on two city commissions, a first in California.
But Brown has stopped short of
allowing non-citizens either to vote or serve on juries, vetoing two bills that
handily passed the Legislature.
So there remain two key differences
between non-citizens and citizens, the ability to decide the fate of accused
criminals or to rule in civil cases and the right to vote on serious matters of
public policy and choose civic leaders to serve in offices from City Hall to
the White House.
But keeping those remaining rights and
duties reserved exclusively for citizens is not a certainty.
In New York City, for example,
left-leaning Mayor Bill de Blasio and the equally liberal city council are
considering a law allowing all legal residents, regardless of citizenship, to
vote in city elections. There are already a few places that allow something
like this, most notably Chicago, where non-citizens with children enrolled in
public schools can vote in school board elections.
Pushing a right to vote for New York’s
non-citizens, one Queens College political scientist argues that “People are
New Yorkers in profound ways without being citizens of the United States.”
Non-citizens make up more than one-third of the populace of some city council
and school board districts there, notes that city’s Asian American Legal
Defense and Education Fund.
It’s no different today in plenty of
legislative and congressional districts around California. That's a key reason
a mere 46,000 votes were cast last fall in the East Los Angeles district
represented by Democratic Congressman Xavier Becerra, less than one-third the
number that voted in the Orange County district of Republican Dana Rohrabacher.
Becerra’s district is largely peopled by immigrant non-citizens, contrasting
hugely with coastal Orange County.
Some immigrant advocates, like
activists pushing voting rights for non-citizens in New York City, maintain
accurately that non-citizens are equally affected by public policy from tax
levies to road building. So, they say, these folks should have a voice in those
matters.
The argument on the other side is that
if duties and privileges long accorded only to citizens were to be assigned or
given to non-citizens, what’s point of citizenship? What’s the incentive to
learn American history and values, both integral to the exam immigrants must
pass before they can be naturalized?
Blur the distinctions between citizens
and those who are not, and what’s left to move people toward citizenship?
Perhaps just the reality that only citizenship would guarantee anyone the right
to stay in this country if political winds ever shift radically and result in a
mass expulsion of non-citizens, as some presidential candidates now advocate.
The bottom line: it’s probably time to
stop further blurring of lines between citizens and people who don't make that
commitment and pledge of loyalty. That’s the only way to make sure people who
have sworn allegiance to the United States are the ones making policy here, at
all levels.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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