Obama Administration Takes on Immigration Reform
(Originally posted on Daily Kos.)
Last week, a front page New York Times story reported that the Obama Administration is getting ready to address immigration reform. Yesterday, the Times followed up that organized labor had reached a new consensus in support of reform.
That's great news for immigrants' rights advocates. We desperately need to reform our broken immigration system. So far, the White House has provided few details about what its reform agenda will be. But we know from past experience that this will be a volatile and highly contentious issue. President Obama will not speak publicly about it until May. However, officials said the plan would include a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who are already living and working in the U.S., increased border enforcement, and the creation of a national system for verifying workers' eligibility for employment in the U.S.
As the debate begins, the focus will be on how and whether to provide a path to citizenship for the estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants who are already living and working in our country, and what the trade-offs will be to achieve that goal. Hot-button issues will be how to balance new border and workplace "enforcement" measures, what to do about eligible immigrants who are languishing in an endless family visa backlog awaiting their turn, whether to allow temporary workers into the country, and how the current economic climate affects the way we think about immigration reform.
Access to the Courts
There is one fundamental due process principle that is usually forgotten and will get lost in the shuffle unless we put it front and center. That issue is the role of the courts and judicial review.
What does that mean? It means that every person, including immigrants, must have an absolute right to go to court to enforce the law and the Constitution.
How does that relate to immigration reform? Here's how — and it's critical. The path-to-citizenship program that the Obama administration has in mind and that advocates seek will be governed by myriad rules, eligibility requirements and restrictions.
As a result, the actual effect — and success — of any program will depend on implementationby the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). And that will depend on how DHS interprets the law, what rules it applies and how it decides individual cases.
In other words, the devil is in details. Even the most well-intentioned legalization program cannot fulfill its promise unless the rules, regulations and practices that DHS adopts reflect the goals of the law and the intention of Congress.
But sadly, we know from long experience that our immigration agencies — now known as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS), both under the DHS umbrella — are more likely to restrict or even undermine a legalization program than implement it generously and fairly. Whether by instinct, or because it is overwhelmed, incompetent or downright hostile, we cannot depend on DHS to police itself.
In 1986, the last time Congress passed a 'legalization' program, the immigration bureaucracy adopted rules, regulations and practices that would have gutted the program, denied legalization to hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of eligible immigrants, and denied basic due process to those who applied. Advocates objected in vain. Despite innumerable meetings, consultations and deliberations, the then-called Immigration and Naturalization Service ran roughshod over the law and adopted rules that were illegal.
In response, a series of class-action lawsuits were filed in federal courts (including the ACLU's involvement and support) around the country challenging the government's policies and practices. In virtually every case, the courts ordered the government to abandon its practices and regulations. And after the initial court rulings, the government retreated from its positions. In other words, once the lawsuits were filed, they were almost uniformly successful, the government gave up its defense, the rules were changed, and the program ultimately legalized millions of eligible immigrants.
None of that would have been possible without judicial intervention and the ability of immigrants and their advocates to file class-action suits. But for the litigation, the government would never have changed its policies and would have been free to eviscerate the program.
Now here's the critical point: those lawsuits would be difficult or impossible today. The courts are absolutely essential to police the government, enforce the law and fulfill the promise of any legalization program. But the authority of the courts has been steadily attacked and eroded since 1986. After losing cases, the government has tried to escape judicial oversight by stripping the courts of jurisdiction to hear cases and grant effective relief by amending the immigration laws and urging the courts to adopt technical barriers to immigration lawsuits. After 1986 — under the Clinton and both Bush administrations — the government didn't just move the goal posts: it wanted to tear them down.
The response we need today is essential and straightforward: Restore and guarantee the power of courts to promptly review the actual practices and the rules, regulations and policies governing implementation of whatever law Congress ultimately enacts. Give back the historic authority that has been essential to protecting rights, enforcing the Constitution and overseeing agency abuses.
Of course, there are many other looming issues about what an immigration bill might contain, wholly apart from restoring the authority of the courts. Let me flag just a few.
Mandatory Employment Verification
The fundamental trade-off in any bill with legalization is likely to be a mandatory computerized employment verification system for every worker in the United States. That may sound appealing in theory, but it fails to consider the critical issues of privacy, accuracy, abuse and discrimination.
The current, voluntary employment verification system, E-Verify, relies on the notoriously flawed Social Security Administration database, where 70 percent of the errors are in records of U.S. citizens. No other adequate database exists, none is forthcoming and the costs and complexities of establishing a new database are hard to fathom. And fixing the system means tracking everyone from cradle to grave, adopting biometric identifiers, maintaining massive records on all Americans and imposing the equivalent of a national identity card, which the ACLU has long rejected.
More immediately, a flawed verification system means that countless Americans are at risk of losing jobs, will be trapped by a flawed system, denied jobs and subjected to discrimination if they look or sound "foreign." That means Latinos, workers with accents, union activists whom an employer wants to harass and others will be especially vulnerable.
Is there a better way? Yes, enforcing the workplace wage and hours laws, safety rules, minimum wage and union organizing protections. If all workers can effectively enforce their existing legal rights, unscrupulous employers would not have the incentive to hire vulnerable undocumented immigrants in order to exploit them. Congress can achieve that and protect American workers by enacting critical fixes to our labor and workplace laws.
Fairness, Detention and Discretion
Other fundamental problems must also be addressed — and could be remedied today even without massive legislation. For example, the administration could adopt rules that put a measure of fairness and discretion back into the immigration system, end unnecessary and inhumane detention, protect the right to effective legal representation, repeal last-minute "midnight regulations" adopted by the Bush administration and adjudicate individual cases quickly and fairly.
Immigration is a controversial and complex issue. We applaud President Obama for getting ready to address it and leading the public debate. As that process begins, we must remember that the words of the Constitution guarantee fundamental fairness and equal protection to every "person" — not just citizens. Our goal is an immigration system that furthers American values, enhances our national interest, and protects constitutional rights.








Apr 15th, 2009 at 5:45pm
Actualy the only people who really have a right to be in the U.S. and all other countries in the Americas are Indians.Furthermore since the main targets of immigration are in fact of indian descent it should be the folks of the I.N.N. who should be deported.
Apr 15th, 2009 at 8:08pm
Every "person"?? Is every "person" going to foot the bill?
I was recently in a large warehouse store. The people beside me were hispanic (because I know spanish) They did not have a picture on their card. The woman was upset when asked for identification. When the cashier call her supervisor and the supervisor saw the people she told her to just let them go through it is not worth the hassle.
However had that be me, I would have been asked to leave the store. Something is not right with this picture.
I will give you this It is a very controversial and complex issue. Not only will citizens be upset, I have a feeling the people waiting patiently in line will not be real happy either.
Apr 18th, 2009 at 11:58pm
Why is it that 10% of the population is denied the right to marry and the benefits that go along with that. Public Law 104-199 sets out to take away the rights of civilian and military Americans. How pathetic is it that illegal aliens are given more rights than brave men and women who have and are fighting for democracy. Lets face it our government has sold us all out. Whose rights will be the next to go? The ACLU cares more about people screaming racism like the boy who cried wolf. We are prejudiced if we want to keep people out of our country, while we pay to build a wall for mexico's southern boarder.
Apr 28th, 2009 at 1:31am
If an immigrant wants to be here then go through the process like everyone else and this kind of crap won't happen. Stop swimming across the river and do it the right way. If you don't we should ship their ass right back and deny all future entry. Our prisons are loaded with illegal immigrants that we pay to feed and house after they commit a crime! My tax dollars pay for that! Enough of this pussy footing around! Ship them all back to where they came from and keep them there!
May 4th, 2009 at 12:42am
The Democrates need 11 too 20 million new voters before the next election. Our next president will be mexican. They stick together. La Raza. They use our constitution against us. PLEASE THINK ABOUT THIS! PEOPLE FROM ANOTHER COUNTRY WHO DON"T BELONG HERE HAVE THE SAME,IF NOT MORE RIGHTS THAN YOU! YOU HAVE BECOME A SECOND CLASS CITIZEN. THEY ARE FIRST IN LINE FOR WORK, PAY LITTLE OR NO TAXES, COLLECT WELFARE, CLOSE OUR HOSPITALS, FLOOD OUR SCHOOLS, DESTROY OUR NEIGHBORHOODS, SELL YOU'RE KIDS DRUGS, AND SMILE TO YOU'RE FACE AS THEY DO IT! WHY DO YOU THINK CALIFORNIA IS IN DEBT. WHY DO YOU THINK OUR TAXES ARE GOING UP. WHY ARE 3,000 FAMILIES A MONTH LEAVING?
May 11th, 2009 at 12:48pm
Wow! This is all so rediculous! Seems like this country is full of racist people! Most of you forget who was here first! It wasn't the white man, it was us! Native Americans and Mexicans! The white man divided up this country, had he not done that you all would be out numbered! And that's all you fear! And that's why you are all hell bent on keeping us out! I am not racist! I am human just like you and everyone else... I see a person before I see a color! I hear a voice before I hear a language! You can't point the finger at just Latinos for crimes... because everyone commits crimes...everyone.. even the white man. And don't worry about your stupid taxes! YOUR NOT THE ONLY ONE THAT PAYS THEM!!!!! I am sick and tired of everyone complaining about us "brown" people! Not all of us are losers.. and when it comes down to it there will always be more "white trash" in this country! Get a life...mind your own business, be happy to be alive, and go screw your self!
May 17th, 2009 at 8:11pm
The US government should legalize all illegal citizens (By the way i hate to use the word illegal, because it is pejorative). The USA was created originally as a land for all humanity, not for a few, who think that this country belongs to them. In fact USA stole land from Mexico, so Mexicans and others who are illegals in USA have a moral right to be here. Another thing that the US government should do is to change its political doctrine from capitalism toward socialism. Because capitalism doesn't work.
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May 18th, 2009 at 2:49pm
#6 I beg to differ with you. I do not fear being outnumbered. I don't care who was here first. The "white trash" sounds like a racial slur to me. I don't remember reading anyone complaining about brown people. The people that we are complaining about are those that are here illegally. Doesn't matter what color they are. Illegal is Illegal it is breaking the law. Breaking the law. I will say it one more time Breaking the law.
If someone wants to come to this country they can as long as they follow the proper procedures like the people that have been in the line for a long time.
For an example recently my husband and I were going to visit his mother. As we were coming down the street a car pulled out of the alley, we were both so close to one another you could have just put a piece of paper between the cars. My husband and the driver just looked and wave at one another. Parking the car and getting out, there was a car that saw what happened also there were 2 men out working on their car. I was asked if we got hit. I said no but it was close. These three people started bad mouthing these other people, saying they had enough of this and someone was going to get killed. They do this all the time. The 3 gentlemen were black, the car had latinos in it, and we were white.
So that just shows you that it is just not white people that are having the problem.
Aug 4th, 2009 at 9:01pm
Wow! This is all so rediculous! Seems like this country is full of racist people!
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PLEASE EXPLAIN HOW A PERSON WHO STANDS AGAINST ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTION IS RACIST?
CAN YOU REALLY LOOK AT THE STATISTICS AND SAY WE DON'T HAVE A REASON TO BE UPSET?
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Most of you forget who was here first! It wasn’t the white man, it was us! Native Americans and Mexicans!
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IT WAS THE NATIVES, THEN THE SPANIARDS, AND THEN LAST THE MEXICANS. MEXICANS LOVE JUSTIFYING THEIR "INVASION" BY SAYING THEIR INDIGENOUS TO THE LAND. HOW COME NONE OF THE BLAME GOES TO THE MEXICAN GOVERNMENT? BESIDES, THEY'RE LEAVING THAT COUNTRY FOR OUR GENEROUS COUNTRY. SO WHY NO BITTERNESS TOWARDS THEM WHEN IT'S CLEAR THAT MEXICO DISCRIMINATES AGAINST THE DARKER SKINNED MEXICANS? YES, THE ONES WITH MORE INDIAN BLOOD. PLEASE RESEARCH YOURSELF OR BETTER YET GO THERE AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.
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The white man divided up this country, had he not done that you all would be out numbered!And that’s all you fear! And that’s why you are all hell bent on keeping us out! I am not racist! I am human just like you and everyone else…
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OH YEAH, THAN STOP ASSUMING EVERYBODY'S WHITE WHO STANDS AGAINST THE "INVASION".
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I see a person before I see a color!
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UNLESS IT'S A WHITE MAN, EH?
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I hear a voice before I hear a language!
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IT'S NOT HARD TO LEARN A LANGUAGE.
IF I MOVED TO ANOTHER COUNTRY
LEARNING A NEW LANGUAGE WOULD BE EXCITING.
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You can’t point the finger at just Latinos for crimes… because everyone commits crimes…everyone.. even the white man.
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EXCEPT THE FACT THAT IN CA HISPANICS COMMIT 2X AS MUCH CRIME.
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And don’t worry about your stupid taxes! YOUR NOT THE ONLY ONE THAT PAYS THEM!!!!!
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AND WE ALL HAVE DIFFERENT IDEAS ON HOW IT SHOULD BE SPENT. ARE YOU SAYING WE SHOULD JUST NOT CARE WHERE OUR TAXES GO?
FUNNY MAN YOU ARE.
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I am sick and tired of everyone complaining about us “brown” people! Not all of us are losers.. and when it comes down to it there will always be more “white trash” in this country!
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I DON'T KNOW WHITES WERE THE TOPIC, RACIST! I'M NOT GONNA SIT HERE AND DO THE NUMBERS BUT IT'S CLEAR ILLEGAL ALIENS ARE A BURDEN TO AMERICAN TAX PAYERS. YOU SEEM TO THINK ALL BROWN PEOPLE SHOULD HAVE A FREE PASS TO DO WHAT THEY PLEASE WITHOUT PEOPLE EXPRESSING THEIR THOUGHTS ON IT.
SOUND LIKE A PRETTY STUBBORN MAN TO ME.
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Get a life…mind your own business, be happy to be alive, and go screw your self!
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THIS IS OUR BUSINESS. OUR KIDS ARE AFFECTED, OUR BUDGET IS AFFECTED, AND OUR FUTURE IS RELIANT ON PEOPLE WHO CARE.IT'S IMPORTANT TO EDUCATE KIDS
ON THIS AND SO THEY KNOW THAT SMEARS FROM THE SELFISH SIDE DON'T MAKE YOU A RACIST. IT JUST MAKES YOU CONCERNED FOR THE PROSPERITY OF THIS COUNTRY.
SEE YA, BITTER RACIST!
Aug 29th, 2009 at 5:54pm
If this is the AMERICAN CLU why aren't you fighting for the AMERICAN people? Illegal is illegal. I want you to fight for those of us who are here legally. I want you to do what is right under the law. I want you to stop creating more lawlessness in this country by doing the opposite of what is right.
Oct 10th, 2009 at 11:12am
Ok, the comments are supposed to be about Immigration. Obama should move his t**** and swiftly pass a comprehensive immigration bill. Doccument all those who already live here for so many years. What is the meaning of charging $700 for a Citizenship application, making people wait an extra 2 or even 5 years before they can get an answer for their citizenship application? Also, we are fed up of Immigration agents acting like some Gods when it comes to US citizens trying to bring their relatives to the USA. So even as US citizens, we have to be treated like second class citizens? just because we were not born in this country? Do you people realize how hard it is to live here without a single family member? I doubt the IRS will wait 5 years or even a single year for my $30 000 taxes a year. So Why must we wait so many years to get a relative to come to the USA? Don't they have computers in the Homeland security? >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Obama gets the nobel peace prize? what did he exactly do? just Wondering
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