Sunday, March 16, 2008

State reactions to immigration

Ever since Congress abdicated its responsibility and refused to pass immigration reform, numerous state and local governments have been passing their own legislation, often restrictive. Now, however, lawmakers in both Arizona and Colorado want to create their own guest worker programs to deal with labor shortage.

Ironically, Arizona and Colorado are two states that have been at the forefront of punitive legislation (Tom Tancredo is of course from Colorado). Therefore some members of the legislature (even Republicans, I should point out, as this is not always a clearly partisan issue) are trying to counter restrictive legislation they already passed.

Labor rights groups oppose the idea because they are concerned that state-level guest worker programs will lack sufficient protection for the workers (some opponents may also be against guest workers programs on principle).

Ultimately, this particular proposal is currently a moot point, because it would entail states taking over federal duties and therefore is not constitutional, unless Congress expressly delegates that duty. This may simply be a trial balloon--after all, it has not gone up for a vote--but it is yet another example of what a mess Congress has made.

4 comments:

Bosque 12:55 PM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Bosque 12:58 PM  

Most States don't have a problem with migrant workers or immigrants themselves, what they have a problem with as you know is ILLEGAL immigrants. Simply because you do not know who has come over the border. It could be a farmer, a cook, a laborer looking for work or it could be a rapist, murderer or drug dealer.

There's a huge cartel war on the border with Mexico ... just look at La Jordana and see how many local and federal police are being killed in Ciudad Juárez.

Az imposes huge fines on businesses that hire illegals. The State wants to be able to check and know who is coming to work and live there; which makes complete sense. This also lowers the burden on taxpayers because businesses hiring migrants have to pay appropriate taxes and more importantly follow the laws for work site safety and insurance.

This will be interesting to watch.

Greg Weeks 1:37 PM  

I disagree that most states don't have a problem with migrant workers or immigrants when they are Latino and speak Spanish.

Bosque 5:22 AM  

Well...Some crazy Latinos went and marched with foreign flags on US soil and La Raza said a bunch of really really stupid shit ... That right there pissed the gringos off and started everything going on now.

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