The GOP’s citizenship suppression - By Harold Meyerson
The GOPs citizenship suppression
By Harold Meyerson
Bob Goodlatte, the Republican chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, says he is against creating a special path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. The path he refers to which many of his Republican House colleagues also oppose is the one laid out in the immigration reform bill the Senate passed this summer; it would enable the undocumented, after paying some fines and learning English, to get green cards in 10 years and apply for citizenship three years after that.
But by opposing this special path, House Republicans may create a special category of American: legal but permanently non-citizen. Able to work, required to pay taxes but not able to vote. Subject to taxation without representation. In a word, second-class.
While House Republicans have been busily working on shutting down the government and defaulting on the debt, they have not neglected their duty to screw up immigration reform. Just how much theyll mangle it remains unclear. Some oppose any legalization at all. Some support extending citizenship to the Dreamers undocumented immigrants brought here as children but no one else. Goodlatte says he is open to legalizing additional undocumented immigrants, but its not clear that he wants a bill that would enable them to become citizens. (This last option was recently endorsed by Tamar Jacoby, who heads a business group, ImmigrationWorks USA, that wants to take employers off the hook for employing undocumented workers but is apparently indifferent to whether those workers can win any political rights and the bargaining power that goes with it.)
By opposing a special path, Goodlatte has set himself against the provision in the Senate bill that would enable the law-abiding undocumented to obtain green cards after a 10-year wait. Instead, he is reportedly working on legislation that would put them in the existing line for green cards, where the wait would be closer to a century. With green cards for low- and semi-skilled workers limited to just a few thousand each year, millions of the undocumented would never obtain the cards or the subsequent opportunity to become citizens.
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