Enregistrement 10 – The right and the left score points (The Los Angeles Times, April 2018)

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The right and the left score points on immigration, but both sides are losing

By Steve Lopez, The Los Angeles Times, April 25, 2018 (Adapted)

When it comes to illegal immigration, California is no longer at war with a single foe — the Trump administration. It’s now officially at war with itself.

One Southern California town after another has followed the lead of the Orange County Board of Supervisors and voted to side with President Trump in opposing state “sanctuary” laws that offer some protections for people in the country illegally. On Monday night, Upland and Yucaipa joined the Red City Uprising and fell into line with Dana Point, Huntington Beach, Yorba Linda, Newport Beach, San Juan Capistrano and other towns. Meanwhile, State Sen. Kevin de Leon, an L.A. Democrat who wrote one of the sanctuary bills targeted in a Trump administration lawsuit, shot back against those “pushing a racist and anti-immigrant agenda.”

No doubt, more than a few bigots are lathered up and on the march, their batteries charged by Trump. But others have fair questions about the cost of illegal immigration when it comes to healthcare, education, incarceration and other public services. Others don’t understand why state and local governments would not cooperate fully with federal agents regarding people in the country illegally. These folks do not like being called racists, and their heads explode when the left refuses to distinguish between immigration and illegal immigration. There are no winners here, and neither side is accomplishing much, other than to radicalize political foes and crush any possibility of useful dialogue or compromise. Mike Madrid, a GOP consultant in California, packed this up rather neatly. “Politicians are more interested in having a problem than finding a solution,” he said. “When they’re invested in the problem, it perpetuates the idea of them as leaders in this cultural war.”

Well put, and Exhibit A is guess who. Illegal immigration was the stepladder Donald Trump stood on two years ago, when he promised to round up and boot illegals back to where they came from. Here’s the thing, though. I know where they are. You know where they are. We all know where they are. Is Trump the only guy in America who doesn’t know where they are? People in the country without papers can be found working at hotels and restaurants and in the fields, if they’re not at your house putting the baby to sleep or trimming the hedge.

Sure, arrests are up sharply since Trump took office. But it doesn’t seem like his heart is really in it. Federal agents nab one person in Lincoln Heights or Delano or some other place, giving chase if necessary, while thousands of others duck briefly, then go about their business. But what’s the point? If it’s to discourage more people from crossing the border, that trend had already begun as birth rates dropped and the Mexican economy improved. If Trump is serious, why haven’t battalions of agents parachuted onto California farmland and done the job he promised?

Let me throw out a couple of possibilities. Maybe Trump understands the economic disruption that would cause, particularly to farmers who voted for him, so the whole thing is a charade. Or maybe his only goal is to keep his legions cheering, and that’s as simple as making a few high-profile arrests here and there. Wayne Cornelius, UC San Diego professor emeritus who has studied immigration for decades, believes it is the case: “Trump is throwing red meat to the nativist portion of his base, without seriously disrupting the economy. It’s a political game. Leave the vast majority of employers alone, but terrorize their workers, families and communities.”

Madrid, the GOP consultant, thinks the right and the left are equally complicit. “The right continues to use the immigration issue to stoke xenophobic fears, and fears of a changing America,” he said. “And the left continues to basically pursue whatever de facto open border policy they can, with neither side outlining the necessary steps on immigration reform. And it’s not that complicated, by the way.”

OK then, what would he do? Madrid cited three points that he said have strong bipartisan support. First, a deal on a pathway to legal status for people in the country illegally, if they haven’t committed crimes. Second, stricter border enforcement, which would be easier to accomplish if instead of spending billions on a wall, the investment were in more agents and technology. Third, faster and more orderly processing of visas for those whose labor is needed in the US, and greater support for economic development in Mexico so that fewer people choose to come north.

This gets my vote, but what chance is there when compromise is seen as capitulation, and both sides are too invested in the war?

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