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A.N.S.W.E.R.'s response to
Bush’s Speech on Immigration:
Hit the Streets May 16th and May 17th
No to Troops at the Border -- Yes to Amnesty
and Full Legalization!
Caught between his extreme right wing
and racist base, and fearful of the power of the people that has
exploded on the streets in the last two months, Bush was compelled
to go on national television tonight to announce his
version of immigration reform. His announced plans show that
militarism is not only the favored method but the actual goal of the
Bush administration as it deals with every issue from the Middle
East to the struggle for workers rights inside the United States
itself.
As a direct response to the heroic
mobilizations of millions of immigrant workers and their families
seeking to achieve basic civil rights and workers rights, Bush went
on national television tonight to announce that he is sending
thousands of troops to the U.S.-Mexican border as a support
apparatus for the arrests of millions of immigrant workers as they
try to cross the border in a desperate search for employment.
The A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition calls on
people all over the country to take to the streets at emergency
protests tomorrow May 16 in New York City and on Wednesday, May
17, in Washington DC, to demand: No to Bush’s anti-immigrant
campaign! Stop racist deportations and border militarization!
Support full civil rights, legalization and amnesty for all
undocumented workers! This week Congress is debating immigration
bills, Bush wants to sign a measure by the end of the months - it
is urgent that the voice of the people be heard.
Immigrant Rights Groups,
Unions, Civil Rights Organizations and the Anti-War movement are
Building Unity to Stop the Racist and Anti-Worker Campaign of Bush
and the Right-Wing.
As with every political program based
on racism, the campaign against immigrant workers is based on
dehumanizing, stereotypical lies and propaganda. Uprooted from their
homelands by the process of corporate globalization and so-called
Free Trade, which has led to massive unemployment, millions of
workers from Mexico, Central America and elsewhere have migrated to
the United States, where they are forced to take employment in
low-paid, back-breaking jobs.
In the last year, 1.2 million people
have been arrested at the U.S.-Mexican border. Since 1994, when the
Clinton Administration further militarized the border at common
crossing sights, more than 3,600 immigrants - forced into ever-more
dangerous routes - have died in the Arizona desert, in the
mountains in California, in other remote locations, or have
suffocated in the back of trucks stuffed with human cargo. Bush
tonight announced that he would use the military to erect "high
tech fences in urban corridors," a decision that will
inevitably consign an ever larger number of people to silent
death. This is an effort to force people into ever more dangerous
and deadly crossings through the deserts and mountains.
The struggle of the
undocumented worker
Those undocumented workers who make
it across the border are employed at poverty wages and live with
ever-present fear of arrest, ICE raids and deportation. Undocumented
workers are viciously exploited by bosses who know that it is
difficult for these workers to participate in union drives that
would offer protection and higher wages.
Undocumented immigrant workers pay
taxes and have deductions taken from their paychecks and
yet they are ineligible to collect any benefits. Undocumented
immigrants pay more than $7 billion into Social Security each year
but unlike other workers who pay Social Security taxes, they can
receive no benefits from the program. Likewise, they pay more than
$1.5 billion into Medicare each year even though they are ineligible
for Medicare. (New York Times, April 5, 2005). Undocumented workers
pay sales taxes and property taxes.
Background to the Current
Immigrant Rights Struggle -- NAFTA’s Impact
In 1993, after negotiating for
several years, the governments of Canada, Mexico and the United
States signed the North American Free Trade Agreement. NAFTA went
into effect in 1994.
The results have devastated workers'
communities in all three countries.
First, NAFTA prohibits the Mexican
government from subsidizing agricultural production. But at the same
time, it allows the government of the United States to continue
providing subsidies to U.S. agriculture to the tune of billions of
dollars every year. The practical result is that U.S. producers are
dumping in the Mexican market their subsidized products at prices
with which Mexican producers can’t compete. With no jobs, and in
order to survive, many Mexican farmers are left with only one
choice: to migrate to the United States.
On the U.S. side, NAFTA has meant
that many good-paying jobs have gone to Mexico. For example,
U.S.-owned auto plants have set up shop in various parts of Mexico
where workers earn a fraction of what those companies were required
to pay under the terms of their collective bargaining agreements to
their U.S. workers.
Unlike their displaced Mexican
counterparts who migrate to the United States, American workers
choose not to migrate for obvious reasons. U.S. workers do not have
the incentive to migrate to Mexico to earn one-tenth of their former
salaries.
What happens next? The agents of
Corporate America distort the terrible situation created by
so-called Free Trade. They do so by working long and hard to exploit
the anger of the U.S. worker to foment racist feelings and attitudes
against the undocumented and against everything foreign, especially
against non-European immigrants. This is done in order to divide,
weaken and maintain effective political control of the working
class, and to ensure their continued economic exploitation.
That is why today the U.S.
government—instead of offering legalization, equality and
amnesty—promotes the Bush “guest worker” immigration plan,
which in effect amounts to indentured servitude for immigrants. This
after Bush had promised his “good friend,” Mexican president
Vicente Fox, an amnesty plan for Mexican immigrants.
In order to leverage the Bush
immigration plan, the political right wing in the United States
funds and promotes groups like the so-called Minutemen. This fascist
group and others like it are spreading like wildfire throughout the
country, increasing racist attitudes against immigrants and sowing
confusion amongst the working class about who their real class
enemies are.
Yes to Amnesty and Full
Rights -- No to a Guest Worker Program!
Everyone in the immigrants rights
movement agrees that the HR4437, the Sensenbrenner Bill that turns
undocumented workers into felons, must be defeated. But there are
differences over what should take its place. Some in the union
movement and the immigrants rights movement support the
McCain-Kennedy Bill or the Hagel-Martinez Bill under the assumption
that this is “the best we can get.” Many corporations and banks
support these “compromise” bills because they are tailor-made to
benefit corporations who want low-wage workers who have no rights
and are dependent on the employer to prevent deportation.
Some in the labor and immigrant
rights movement, reacting to the pressure of the racist
right-wing’s opposition to the demand for amnesty insist that the
word “amnesty” should never be uttered. This is self-defeating
and does not in any way correspond to the sentiments of the
immigrant worker community. When people at the mass marches are
asked: “What do we want?” no one yells back “a guest worker
program.” The chant that resonates at the base of the movement is
Amnistia or Amnesty -- and it is heard everywhere. The people want
equality. They want equal protection under the law, an equal right
to join a union, an equal right to live in dignity.
What is wrong with a Guest
Worker Program?
The historical record of “guest
worker” programs shows that the main beneficiaries are rich
business owners, not immigrant workers. The United Farm Workers,
under the leadership of Cesar Chavez, worked to overturn the
Braceros guest worker program as a key element to eventually
organizing farm workers into the union.
The Bracero program initiated in
1942, lasted until 1964, by which time the program’s federal
director, Lee G. Williams, deemed it “nothing short of legalized
slavery.”
In 1942, many U.S. citizens working
in agriculture were either drafted into World War II or sent to
factories to help with military production. U.S. agribusiness faced
a labor shortage crisis and called on the government for help. The
U.S and Mexican governments quickly instituted the Bracero
program—bracero means “hired hand”—that brought in Mexican
laborers for seasonal harvests or a set period of time. After their
contracts expired, most of the workers were deported to Mexico.
The braceros were cheated out of
hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid labor. After a long,
organized struggle, now elderly survivors have only recently won
some of this money back. The Mexican government just announced a
program to compensate former braceros and their families. Mexico’s
program falls far short of what the braceros are actually owed. The
U.S. government has offered nothing.
The new proposed guest worker program
is nearly a repeat of the Bracero program. Most of the guest
workers, like the majority of undocumented immigrants in the U.S.,
come from Mexico.
This time, the program is meant to
expand far beyond agriculture. Employment and deportation will not
be based on seasonal harvests. According to the White House website,
“The program will require the return of temporary workers to their
home country after their period of work has concluded. The legal
status granted by this program would last three years, be renewable,
and have an end.”
As John Sweeney, President of the
AFL-CIO stated about the "compromise" legislation: they
“tear at the heart of true reform and will drive millions of
hard-working immigrants further into the shadows of American
society, leaving them vulnerable to exploitation.” By dividing
immigrants already here into three different classifications,
the…proposal will create an undemocratic, three-tiered society
that degrades and marginalizes millions of immigrant families in our
communities while driving down wage and benefits standards for
everyone.”
We encourage everyone to join a
demonstration and rally in your area on May 16th and 17th and in the
coming week. Now is the time for everyone to stand up for full
equality, legalization and amnesty for undocumented workers. The
struggle for workers justice has no borders.
Protests condemning the
militarization of the border!
New York City
Tuesday, May 16 at
5:00pm
Department of Homeland Security, 26 Federal Plaza
Chicago
Wednesday
May 17 - 5 pm
Federal Plaza (Adams & Dearborn in Chicago)
Washington, DC
Wednesday, May 17
4:00 pm
National Mall at 14th St.
Washington DC
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