• How Mass Immigration Hurts Black Americans

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 8 16:09:40 2024
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    from
    https://www.thedailybeast.com/how-mass-immigration-hurts-black-americans

    How Mass Immigration Hurts Black Americans
    CHANGE IT UP
    The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) has an obligation to its base—which means taking a different approach than most Democrats to the migrant crisis.

    Roger House
    Roger House
    Updated Jan. 07, 2024 3:38AM EST / Published Jan. 06, 2024 11:02PM EST
    OPINION Photograph of mass migrants at the US/Mexico border
    John Moore/Getty

    Immigration is among the most wrenching political questions of the 2024 election. Yet, when Congress resumes debate on border security in
    January, the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) has an obligation to act
    on behalf of its base. That’s because the Black community is disproportionately impacted by the current policy on immigration—and the unpredictable border surges of “asylum seekers.”

    To date, the body of 60 members—three Senate Democrats, 55 voting House Democrats and two non-voting—has been missing in action. The skirting of
    duty is largely the result of being beholden to campaign money, business support, and Hispanic and progressive factions of the party. Now is the
    time for the dereliction to stop.

    CBC members must shed their reticence and shine a spotlight on the mean correlation between the rising levels of immigration and the declining
    fortunes of Black workers, particularly men.

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    For example, the authors of “Immigration and the Economic Status of African-American Men,” a 2010 study published in the journal Economia, concluded, “We find a strong correlation between immigration, black
    wages, black employment rates, and black incarceration rates. As
    immigrants disproportionately increased the supply of workers in a
    particular skill group, the wage of black workers in that group fell,
    the employment rate declined, and the incarceration rate rose.”

    In the years since, the surge of economic immigration has eroded the
    standing of Black labor even more. It caused T. Willard Fair, President
    and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Miami, to write an op-ed in The Philadelphia Tribune where he questioned the pernicious loyalty of the
    CBC to the Democratic Party’s immigration policy:

    “The lasting effects of uncontrolled, mass immigration on Black
    Americans are plainly obvious and have been well-documented throughout
    our country’s history,” he lamented in the March 2022 commentary. “So
    how can any Black politician in good conscience advocate for a more
    expansive immigration policy that would continue to do us harm?”

    Clearly, the CBC has a duty to protect the interests of the over 18
    million Black Americans it represents, even if it cuts against the grain
    of the party. No doubt this is a tricky subject for Black Democrats
    because many take pride in a legacy of supporting non-discriminatory immigration policy. The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act, which
    opened doors for legal immigration from Asia and Eastern and Southern
    Europe, is among such civil rights accomplishments.

    In addition, the CBC has expressed solidarity with the plight of
    immigrants as “people of color,” even though immigrants from
    predominantly Black countries account for about 575,000 of the estimated
    11 million immigrants in the country illegally.

    Photographs of migrants being dropped off in New York City
    Dozens of migrant families are seen arriving from Texas at the Port
    Authority Bus Terminal in New York City early September 6, 2023.

    Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Daily News via Getty
    When Congress returns, the CBC must herald how their people are under
    duress from the helter-skelter border crossings, unclear enforcement
    policies, red state busing of asylum seekers to blue state sanctuary
    cities, unpredictable competition for jobs and housing, and lack of
    progress on immigration reform.

    “CBC members must shed their reticence and shine a spotlight on the mean correlation between the rising levels of immigration and the declining
    fortunes of Black workers, particularly men.”
    It means acknowledging the failure of the Biden administration to secure
    the border—but helping it to find a way forward. To start, it would be prudent to untangle the meaning of popular terms used by the press to
    describe the border dynamics. For example, most people on the border are permanent economic immigrants. As such, they are not “migrants” in the normal understanding of the word and should not be treated as such.

    The term “migrants'' typically refers to a mass movement of workers
    within a country, such as the westward migrations of white farmers known
    as “Okies” during the Great Depression, or the relocation of Black sharecroppers to the urban factories during the world wars. Such is not
    the case for the economically distressed populations passing through
    Mexico, Central America, Venezuela, Cuba, and Haiti, as described by
    Project Hope, a non-governmental organization that assists health care
    workers with crises.

    Rather than seeking political asylum, most are seeking to take advantage
    of legal loopholes to bypass the normal immigration process. They freely express a desire for access to work, housing, and permanent residency.
    They speak of wanting to take care of their families, even as their
    shortcuts threaten to torpedo American workers.

    ‘Taking from Peter to Feed Paul’
    America’s history of favorable treatment for immigrants is a window on
    the status of race and labor in our culture. Black American workers have
    been diminished by pro-immigration policies ever since slave labor built
    the country into an economic powerhouse. For example, America used
    preferential land and labor enticements to recruit European immigrants
    in the mid-19th century.

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    The CBC would be prudent to link the security of Black labor to the best practices recommended for border security and immigration reform;
    namely, gaining control of the border, reducing illegal economic
    immigration, shutting down the red state busing activity, and
    establishing legal pathways to meet the demands of business for workers.

    First, the CBC should push for inclusive standards for Black labor in
    skilled industries that attract disproportionate concentrations of
    immigrant workers. It might propose language that mirrors President
    Biden’s March 2022 executive order 14005 stating that the “Future is
    Made in All of America by All of America’s Workers.”

    The CBC might offer similar language in the upcoming debates on
    immigration legislation—specifically, to prioritize the hiring and
    training of underrepresented American workers in civil construction. It
    would reinforce the equity provisions established by Congress in the infrastructure and clean energy laws.

    The construction and manufacturing industries will receive a jump-start
    from the $500 billion Inflation Reduction Act, the $1.2 trillion
    Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, and complementary investments
    from private companies. It will pay to reconstruct highways, bridges and tunnels, weatherize public buildings, install electric charging
    stations, construct electric battery plants and electric vehicle
    factories, and develop wind and solar power plants.

    The projects will require the hiring and training of thousands of
    skilled workers, many without college degrees. Yet, Black labor
    historically has been excluded in civil construction. Today, as a
    consequence, the racial demographic in the construction industry is 60
    percent white, 30 percent Hispanic, and 5 percent Black American,
    according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    In addition, sanctuary cities like New York are receiving large
    allocations of federal infrastructure funds. The city’s construction
    industry employed 374,000 people in 2020—and 53 percent were immigrants.
    By contrast, the unemployment rate of Black male workers was higher than
    any other ethnic group.

    Second, the CBC should propose that sanctuary cities seeking bailouts
    from Washington be required to give the local population first dibs on facilities and services. The failure of authorities in such cities to prioritize their native underserved populations creates a dynamic of
    “taking from Peter to feed Paul” that is abhorrent.

    Congress should require sanctuary cities to prioritize the local
    population for provisions such as homeless shelters, affordable housing
    units, emergency room and mental health services, education outreach,
    legal services, and food programs, among others. The populations from
    the border should have access to older facilities, if room is available.

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    Rev. Al Sharpton delivers remarks at the 'March On For Voting Rights' rally. Third, the CBC should call on the Biden administration to raise seed
    money for a reparations fund with the same urgency it has done for
    immigrants. Harris is campaigning on her success in raising $4 billion
    to help migrating immigrants in Central America. Why not utilize her fundraising prowess towards a development bank for the descendants of
    slavery and Jim Crow?

    Finally, the CBC should demand that immigrants be required to learn
    about America’s struggle against racism and colorism. The colorism
    system of subtle discrimination based on fair complexions can be deeply
    rooted in the culture and practices of people from countries with
    colonial pasts. Black Americans should not be expected to endure the
    petty slights of color hierarchy with every new surge of immigration.

    In closing, the CBC has an urgent responsibility to defend the needs of
    Black labor in the pending debates on border security and immigration
    reform. It would seem to be in the interest of both parties to hear them
    out.

    Roger House
    Roger House
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