Immigration reform's 'surge': The politics works, but will the policy?
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| Washington
Immigration reform continued forward on Wednesday, when the Senate approved an amendment promising a "border surge" by a 69-27 vote.听
But that same amendment, a compromise struck between Republican senators and the "Gang of 8" authors of the immigration bill, is being criticized as being more about big, splashy numbers than finding best policy to staunch illegal immigration.听
Attracting the most skeptical head-cocking in and around Capitol Hill is $30 billion in new funds to double the number of border patrol agents on the southern border 鈥 a splurge that more than tripled the bill鈥檚 cost.
That鈥檚 before an additional chunk of funds to expand southern border fencing to 700 miles from the 350 required miles in the original bill, helping to bring the bill鈥檚 total cost to $48 billion, up from some $8 billion in its original form
鈥淚f you really wanted to spend money, this is not where I鈥檇 want to spend money,鈥 says Seth Stodder, who served as as director of policy and planning for US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) from 2001 to 2004, of the border-security amendment struck by Republican Sens. Bob Corker of Tennessee and John Hoeven of North Dakota with the "Gang of Eight" authors of the immigration bill.
鈥淚鈥檓 torn. I understand the politics of it. I understand we need to do something that people in the Senate and in the House are sufficiently comfortable with the idea of immigration reform,鈥 says Mr. Stodder, now a partner at the law group Obaghi and Stodder and who supports the broader immigration reform bill. 鈥淚f that鈥檚 the price we have to pay to fix the immigration laws, I might be willing to pay it. Is it good policy? Probably not.鈥
Nothing鈥檚 wrong with a bumper crop of border agents, skeptics of the measure say. But funding enough agents to听park them about a football field apart every hour of every day from San Diego to Brownsville, Texas, could be money better spent on less boldface priorities with potentially greater return for American border security, critics say.
Better, Stodder says, would be to carve off some of the Corker-Hoeven amendment鈥檚 resources to improve interior immigration enforcement, including federal prosecutors and more immigration and customs enforcement (ICE) special agents.
Or how about boosting the ranks of federal and state labor inspectors, suggests David Kallick of the liberal Fiscal Policy Institute. Such reinforcements not only would make sure the undocumented aren鈥檛 working off the books but also would help to see that other workplace protections are working properly. (Mr. Kallick notes that the number of federal labor inspectors has declined by 30 percent over the past two decades, even as the undocumented population has exploded almost fourfold over that time.)
Inspectors, ICE agents, and prosecutors, coupled with the bill鈥檚 mandatory national implementation of workplace employment verification known as E-Verify, would allow the government to tighten up what policymakers call the 鈥渟econd border,鈥 the line of defense between an illegal immigrant and a job.听
By making it tougher for those in the country illegally to work, the theory goes, foreigners would be less interested in crossing the beefed-up southern border or in overstaying their visas. About 40 percent of the nation鈥檚 undocumented population today is attributed to visa overstays.
That recipe sounds about right even to some of those who oppose the bill.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to get the most bang for the next buck on enforcement if it鈥檚 devoted to worksite enforcement or tracking visa overstayers,鈥澨齭ays Mark Krikorian, an opponent of the Senate bill and head of the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates lower immigration levels. 鈥淲e have actually put a lot of money into the border and it鈥檚 done a significant amount of good, even though there鈥檚 still progress to be made.鈥
Tightening up interior enforcement will be key over the next decade, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) recently found. The CBO estimated that the original Senate immigration bill would reduce illegal immigration by about 25 percent because some advances at stopping would-be border crossers would be partially undone as increased flows of temporary workers would lead to more foreigners overstaying their visas.听(The CBO did not formally adjust that analysis after the Corker-Hoeven amendment passed, saying only that its analysts expect the amendment to further reduce illegal immigration.)
The Corker-Hoeven amendment, while focused on border security, does add a couple of wrinkles to interior enforcement policy. It requires the Department of Homeland Security to begin removing illegal immigrants who have been in the US more than six months beyond their authorization and also requires DHS to start a pilot program for contacting foreigners before their visas expire to see if such notifications help reduce overstays. It also adds prosecutors in Arizona, as well as new judgeships in all three border states.
While some would see the Corker-Hoeven funds readministered, advocates on the left see wasteful 鈥渂order militarization,鈥 a level of security spending that looks like a 鈥淐hristmas wish list for Halliburton,鈥 as Sen. Patrick Leahy (D) of Vermont remarked on the Senate floor.
Those who oppose the bill likewise say that Corker-Hoeven is overshooting. For some, the critique is that the compromise reeks of Washington-as-usual: Throw a bunch of money at the problem and hope it goes away.
鈥淗ow stupid is this?鈥 said Sen. Tom Coburn (R) of Oklahoma, on the Senate floor on Monday. 鈥淭his bill has $48 billion thrown up against the wall to buy the votes to say we鈥檙e going to have a secure border, when in fact we鈥檙e not.鈥
For others, the compromise stinks of a search for political cover. They say it is designed to curry favor with conservative voters but does not meet the long-standing demand of some immigration reform critics that security measures be in place before illegal immigrants receive a shred of new legal protection.
Republican leaders in D.C. believe the party鈥檚 core supporters are 鈥渟tupid,鈥 says Mr. Krikorian. 鈥淭hey really think that by making a big show of extra border patrol agents and drones, don鈥檛 forget the drones, that that鈥檚 somehow going to placate the rubes out in the provinces.鈥
In defense of the deal, Democrats say 鈥済oing big鈥 on border security has been a longtime Republican demand -- and that the amendment finally nails down what, exactly, Republicans want in exchange for a pathway to citizenship for some illegal immigrants.
鈥淭his is what [Republicans] say we need to protect the border,鈥 says Sen. Bob Menendez (D) of New Jersey, one of the bill鈥檚 authors. 鈥淚 have acceded to a large degree to their perspective. What we can鈥檛 constantly have is a moving target.鈥
Republicans like Senator Corker argue that the surge would bring America closer to a secure border than ever before 鈥 and that they鈥檝e been able to extract border security concessions of which conservatives have long dreamed.
鈥淭here is no question this is a far stronger, far stronger, provision [than the original Gang of Eight bill]," said Corker, after a procedural vote on the amendment Monday.
He added: 鈥淚t鈥檚听beyond听border security in many ways.鈥