13. Immigrant Roundups to Gain Cheap Labor for US
Corporate Giants
Sources:
Truthout, January 27, 2007
Title: Which Side Are You On?
Author: David Bacon
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/012907L.shtml
The Nation, February 6, 2007
Title: Workers, Not Guests
Author: David Bacon
http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/020607LB.shtml
Foreign Policy in Focus, February 26, 2007
Title: Migrants: Globalizations Junk Mail?
Author: Laura Carlsen
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4022
Student Researcher: Fernanda Borras
Faculty Evaluator: Diana Grant, Ph.D.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) flooded Mexico with
cheap subsidized US agricultural products that displaced millions of
Mexican farmers. Between 2000 and 2005, Mexico lost 900,000 rural jobs
and 700,000 industrial jobs, resulting in deep unemployment throughout
the country. Desperate poverty has forced millions of Mexican workers
north in order to feed their families.
The National Campesino Front estimates that two million farmers have
been displaced by NAFTA, in many cases related to the increase in US
imports. In 1994, the first year of the agreement, the United States
exported $4.59 billion of agricultural products to Mexico, according
to the Department of Agriculture. By 2006 the figure had risen to $9.85
billionan increase of 114 percent. US exports of corn, Mexicos
staple crop and largest source of rural employment, alone doubled to
over $2.5 billion in 2006.
This combination of unemployment in Mexico, the huge gap between salaries
in the United States and Mexico, and US demand for cheap labor to compete
on global markets has created the current situation. The demand for
undocumented labor in the US economy is structural. It is not just a
few companies seeking to cut corners. These are not just jobs that US
workers wont take. Migrants work in nearly all low-paying
occupations and have become essential to the US economy in the age of
global competition.
The meatpacking industry provides a good example. The US meat industry
as it went global shows a fast slide in working conditions over the
past decades as a result of de-unionization, erosion of wages and benefits,
and increasing safety and health hazards. Part and parcel of that slide
has been the replacement of unionized US workers with migrants.
Aside from traditional employment in agriculture, another major use
of migrant labor has been through the advent of subcontracting. This
practice, well in place since the early 1980s, has contributed to the
de-unionization of the workforce. It conveniently releases employees
from direct responsibility for the legal status and treatment of workers
in their employment.
In the wake of 9/11, Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) has conducted
workplace and home invasions across the country in an attempt to round
up illegal immigrants. ICE justifies these raids under the
rubric of keeping our homeland safe and preventing terrorism. However
the real goal of these actions is to disrupt the immigrant work force
in the US and replace it with a tightly regulated non-union guest-worker
program. This policy is endorsed by companies seeking permanent low-wage
workers through a lobby group called Essential Worker Immigrations Coalition
(EWIC). EWICs fifty-two members include the US Chamber of Commerce,
Wal-Mart, Marriott, Tyson Foods, American Meat Institute, California
Landscape Contractors Association, and the Association of Builders and
Contractors.
ICE now has Operation Return to Sender, a program, supposedly designed
to target fugitive aliens. The program has resulted in the indiscriminate
roundup of over 13,000 undocumented immigrants in cities throughout
the United States.
Immigrant rights organizations have noted that the crackdown has led
to serious human rights violations. Families are separated. Hearings
are slow, and often families do not know for long periods of time where
their loved ones are being held. A January 16 report from the Homeland
Security Departments Inspector General of conditions at five detention
centers identified frequent violation of federal standards, overcrowding,
and health and safety violations.
The firings and raids highlight the vulnerability of immigrant workers
under current US law. In 1986 Congress passed the Immigration Reform
and Control Act, making it a federal crime for an employer to hire a
worker without valid immigration documents. While few employers have
ever faced penalties, in reality the law made it a crime for undocumented
workers to hold a job. No current law requires employers to fire workers
whose Social Security numbers dont jibe. But President Bush proposed
a new administrative rule, which would tell employers to fire anyone
with a no-match. The regulation has never been officially issued, but
many companies claim theyre already complying with it.
Both the enforcement and the agenda behind this crackdown are alarming
many unions. In 1999 the AFL-CIO called for the repeal of employer sanctions,
as well as for a generous legalization program, greater chances for
family reunification, and enforcement of workplace rights. The federation
was already on record opposing new guest worker programs. The Service
Employees, and the two garment unions were among the first to push for
this position. We still call for the repeal of employer sanctions,
as we have from the time it was passed, says Bruce Raynor, UNITE
HERE president. There are 12 million undocumented people living
here, who are important to the economy, he fumes. They have
a right to seek employment, and employers have a right to hire them.
The only way to deal with this is to give workers rights and a path
to citizenship.
UPDATE BY DAVID BACON
Which Side are you On? and Workers, not Guests
expose the way US immigration law is being transformed into a mechanism
for supplying labor to some of the countrys largest corporations.
Immigration law is creating a two-tier society, in which millions of
people are denied fundamental rights and social benefits, because they
are recruited to come to the US by those corporations on visas that
condemn them to a second-class status. Those guest workers face increased
poverty and exploitation, and their status is being used to put pressure
on wages, benefits and workplace rights for all workers.
Workers, not Guests describes the way that the Bush administration
uses immigration raids to attack union organizing campaigns and efforts
by immigrant workers to enforce basic workplace rights and protections.
Further, the administration uses the raids to pressure Congress into
adopting new, vastly expanded guest worker programs.
Both articles describe the way some groups have abandoned their historic
opposition to contract labor programs. Instead, the National Council
of La Raza, the National Immigration Forum, and other labor and religious
organizations have developed a political alliance with some of the countrys
largest corporations, with the objective of passing new guest worker
legislation. This legislation also includes provisions that will make
future immigration raids much harsher and more widespread.
Since publication, the Bush administration and both Democratic and
Republican senators have announced new proposals that go even further.
They would end the ability of immigrant families to reunite in the US,
and instead institute a corporate-driven point system intended to supply
skilled labor to big companies. Raids and enforcement would become even
harsher, with huge detention centers built on the border. The proposals
would allow corporations to recruit as many as 600,000 contract guest
workers a year.
The use of immigration policy to funnel labor to corporate employers
is growing at the same time that Congress is debating new corporate
trade legislation, including the renewal of fast track negotiating authority
for the administration, and four new trade agreementswith South
Korea, Peru, Panama, and Colombia. These bills would all increase the
displacement of workers and farmers in other countries, sending many
of them into the migrant stream to the US. This displacement is being
coordinated with Congresss immigration proposals, which would
then channel displaced workers into industries where their labor can
be used profitably, and ensure that they can only remain in the US in
a status vulnerable to exploitation.
The mainstream press has carried many articles about the proposals
and raids. There has been very little coverage of the corporate backing
for the immigration bills in Congress, however. Many reporters refer
to the guest worker bills as pro-immigrant and left.
This has not only been inaccurate reporting, but has actually covered
up the corporate domination of the immigration agenda in Congress. There
has been virtually no coverage of the connection between US trade policy
and immigration policy.
For more accurate information, readers can contact the National Network
for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, www.nnirr.org. Global Exchange organized
a national speaking tour on trade and immigration policy by David Bacon
and Juan Manuel Sandoval, a leading Mexican critic of NAFTA and US immigration
policy. The presentations made during that tour are available on the
Global Exchange website, www.globalexchange.org.