Working In These Times

Tuesday Apr 27, 2010 9:31 am

Americans Are Mostly Blind to Mexican Workers’ Plight. Will Ariz. Law Trigger Change?

By Roger Bybee

More than 1,000 opponents of Arizona's new immigration enforcement law protest outside the state capitol building on April 25, 2010 in Phoenix, Arizona.   (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images)

Arizona's new law requiring police to determine the status of any suspected "illegal immigrants" has triggered a massive reaction by the Latino movement and its allies, including Americans deeply troubled by the prospect of legalized racial profiling and pervasive police intrusion.

The stunning step, led by Arizona Republicans, will undoubtedly produce huge turnouts for the May 1 immigrant rights rallies across the nation as the new threat to anyone with a dark complexion reverberates across the nation.

It also carries the potential of activating at least one major section of the Democratic base, thus far de-energized and disappointed by the Obama Administration's timidity in tackling job creation and other critical needs. "There has been tremendous disappointment in terms of what President Obama promised during his presidential campaign," says Christine Neumann-Ortiz, director of Voces de La Frontera (Voices of the Border) in Milwaukee and the mastermind behind local May 1 rallies that have consistently drawn some 75,000 people for immigrants' rights since 2006.

"He had a strong immigration platform and we felt there would be, if not reform, at least relief," Neumann-Ortiz added.

The combination of an energized Latino movement visible on May 1 and the threat of more Arizona-style legislation by reactionary state legislatures will certainly heighten the urgency for action by Obama.

MEXICO NEEDS DEVELOPMENT, NOT NAFTA

But there are at least two major factors that will make it hard for Obama to propose meaningful legislation that would end the insecurity of Mexican immigrants living and working in the U.S., establish legal rights for undocumented workers subject to employer exploitation, and improve conditions in Mexico so that its people do not have to migrate to the US.

First, the fact remains that U.S. elites are still unwilling to recognize the utter catastrophe that NAFTA has represented for working people on both sides of the border. In particular, they are seemingly unconcerned about repairing the social and economic damage caused to Mexico by NAFTA. To the extent Corporate America is interested in immigration, it is only to assure a supply of low-wage labor.

Second, demagogues like Patrick Buchanan and Lou Dobbs, while accurately depicting the devastation caused on the U.S. side of the border to discarded workers and abandoned industrial communites by corporations seeking low-wage labor, have helped to blind many Americans to the suffering on the Mexican side, which has fueled immigration. 

While Buchanan and Dobbs issued comparatively mild criticism of Corporate America, their incessant demonization of Mexican immigrants for stealing American jobs and allegedly committing a host of other evils has taken root among wide sectors of white America.

Balanced development of Mexico's resources should have been the goal of a bilateral agreement with the U.S.; instead George Bush I and Bill Clinton decided to annex Mexico as a low-wage industrial suburb and a market for U.S. government-subsidized agriculture and retailers like Wal-Mart. 

Stemming the flow of economic refugees from Mexico will require large-scale assistance to enable Mexicans to build a modern infrastructure of roads, mass transport, electricity lines, clean water, and computer access. But although they eagerly exploit Mexicans with low wages and often humiliating conditions, U.S. firms have been unwilling to pay even minimal taxes.  NAFTA has thus generated neither a middle-class consumer market nor improvements in Mexico's impoverished infrastructure.

The promised uplift in the lives of Mexicans has never materialized. Gustavo Elizondo, former mayor of Ciudad Juarez, whose city is crammed with U.S.-owned low-wage plants (not to mention horrific levels of violence), expressed Mexico's plight clearly:

We have no way to provide water, sewage, and sanitation workers. Every year, we get poorer and poorer even though we create more and more wealth.

Falling industrial wages, peasants forced off the land, small businesses liquidated, growing poverty: these are direct consequences of NAFTA. This harsh suffering explains why so many desperate Mexicans -- lured to the border area in the false hope that they could find decent wages and dignity in the U.S.-owned "maquiladoras" (factories along the border) -- are willing to risk their lives to cross the border to provide for their families.

There were 2.5 million Mexican illegal immigrants in the U.S. in 1995; roughly 8 million have crossed the border since then. In 2005, some 400 desperate Mexicans died trying to enter the U.S.

U.S. PUBLIC'S OPPOSITION TO NAFTA STRONG

NAFTA failed to curb illegal immigration precisely because it was never designed as a genuine development program crafted to promote rising living standards, healthcare, environmental cleanup, and worker rights in Mexico. That's because NAFTA was never more than a formula for government-sanctioned corporate plunder benefiting elites on both sides of the border.

The trade agreement allowed capital to flow freely across the border to low-wage factories and Wal-mart-type retailers, but the same standard of free access would be denied to Mexican workers.

Public opposition in the U.S. to NAFTA-style trade agreements outweighs support by a 4 to 1 margin, according to a January Pew Research poll. No wonder: roughly 1 million jobs have been lost due to NAFTA, the Economic Policy Institute reports. Poll after poll shows similarly overwhelming margins, with even college-educated and Republican voters increasing turning against "free trade."

But as long as America's corporate and political elites are unwilling to offer Mexico anything but military aid, Mexico's problems will fester. Similarly, thanks to the likes of Buchanan and Dobbs, many Americans citizens seem inclined to view Mexican immirants as competitors for scarce jobs rather than fellow victims of transnational corporations.

Obviously, the fight for immigrants' rights and sensible immigration policies will be arduous in today's poisonous political climate. But perhaps Arizona's offensive new law will make many struggling Americans realize that illegal immigrants are not the enemy, but the result of economic policies that hurt all working people—whether they are Mexican or American citizens.

5 comments  · 

Comments

Chicano Wobbly 27 Apr 2010
2:18 pm

The current situation of immigrant workers is just another symptom of unbridled capitalism. The undocumented workers are welcomed by the boss’s, yet scorned when they need a convenient scapegoat for our nation’s social problems.

I firmly believe that within the present immigrant communities lie potentially powerful allies in our struggle with the greedly corporate bosses. Many of these immigrants were active in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, etc, We will need their support if we are ever to attain the badly needed social justice of U.S. workers.

Again I believe that the present two party system must be challenged with the creation of an independent, party of the people! Neither the democrats or republicans will ever truly represent the interests of working people as is evidenced with the failure of either party to address the economic crisis in our own nation!

Roger Bybee 27 Apr 2010
3:09 pm

Dear Chicano Wobbly:
1) You are so right—immigrants are exploited both as a source of cheap, disposable labor and as an “explanation” for America’s lack of jobs.

In reality, as I pointed out, NAFTA has done much to destroy the productive base of both the US and Mexican economies, and we must seek to unite against corporate power.

2) The labor experience and solidarity of immigrant workers has been a gift to the American labor movement, since the vast majority of working people born in the US have no experience with the power that comes from collective action.

3) We have plenty of evidence that the political problem of working people is bi-partisan: NAFTA, the healthcare reform built to appease insurers, and financial reforms that will leave some of the worst features of Wall Street untouched, as even the NY Times editorializes.

However, the US political system is uniquely biased to suppress the emergence of a powerful third party.  Premature efforts at an independent party are bound to fail until there is a a genuine mass movement ready to break out of the Democratic Party.

The constituents of every progressive movement are deeply immersed in the Democrats, and until they are ready to revolt, simply declaring a new party would not suffice.

At the same time, we will ultimately need an independent political force that can speak for the aspirations of the vast majority for genuine democracy in our economic, political, and social lives. Best, Roger

Chicano Wobbly 28 Apr 2010
8:02 am

Roger,
Perhaps the majority of the American electorate is not “ready” to push for an independent and progressive alternative to the Democrats or Republicans. Perhaps they are. The simple fact of the matter is with the economic crisis worsening, with the oppression of our rights, with the denial of justice for workers attempting to organize… well something has to give! Meanwhile it is up to progressives who have “seen the light” to continue agitating for the creation of such. Continued dependence on the democrats for justice is futile. Continued disappointment and betrayal by the democrats will only result in working people doing one of three things: 1) becoming apathetic (hardly a solution), 2) hooking up with the Tea Party (another drastic error) or 3) realizing that both parties are owned and controlled by the corporate bosses and fighting like hell to build a new party committed to justice, clean environment and peace!
I am too old to be considered a starry eyed idealist. However I know that if someone doesn’t continue agitating for change, it will never occur.

anthony 2 May 2010
2:25 pm

We the west as other countries are fighting in every way for world domination,Honduras will fall as most of latin america ,its a 21 century agenda,and if people reading articles dont know yet in a few years youll find outafrica is allready dealt up..

anthony 2 May 2010
2:28 pm

When will we realize just by looking at homeland security in countries that we are busy doing as said in afgan,the CIA has a quota to fullfill .Since Volcano and oil slicks blocked these news not many open their eyes but it is hapening while we should be taking care of our families.!!!

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