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WSWS : News
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Hundreds of thousands march across US for immigrant rights
By a WSWS reporting team
2 May 2007
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Hundreds of thousands of immigrant workers and their supporters
took part in marches and protests in Los Angeles, New York, Phoenix,
Chicago, Denver, Detroit and other major cities across the United
States on May 1 to protest the growing number of raids and deportations
and to press for basic democratic rights. The actions included
demonstrations, consumer boycotts and school walkouts.
This years protests were smaller than a similar immigrant
boycott that took place last May Day in which millions
of workers participated. This was due in part to stepped-up harassment
and intimidation of immigrant workers by federal authorities.
Also, in 2006, masses of people were spurred to action by a piece
of legislation in Congress that would have turned undocumented
immigrantsas well as anyone who rendered them assistanceinto
criminals.
In the past year, the US government deported 221,664 undocumented
workers, 37,000 more than the previous year, an increase of 20
percent.
In a crackdown called Operation Return to Sender, US immigration
officials have arrested more than 23,000 people nationwide. While
supposedly targeting felons, most of those caught up in the sweeps
have no criminal records. Immigration officers have not only targeted
workplaces, but they have raided private homes without warrants
and even rounded up people off the streets. In Chicago, immigration
police with assault rifles reportedly closed off a mall parking
lot in a Latino neighborhood and began asking everyone for papers,
hauling off those without proper documents.

In many cases, the deportations have resulted in the splitting
of families, with US-born children separated from their parents.
The raids have been so provocative that local officials in a number
of cities have issued protests.
The escalating repression is aimed at terrorizing immigrants,
who are being scapegoated for the falling living standards and
job insecurity facing millions of working people. At the same
time, while seeking to channel anger over the failures of the
profit system into anti-immigrant sentiments, the dominant sections
of big business want to ensure continued access to the cheap supply
of labor provided by undocumented workers.
A conflict between those right-wing Republicans in Congress
who favor the mass roundup and deportation of undocumented immigrants
and the Bush administration, which favors a slightly less draconian
approach, has prevented the enactment of new legislation for the
past year.
The legislation supported by Bush is harshly punitive. It calls
for increasing the number of immigration police and requiring
undocumented workers seeking permanent residency to endure long
waiting periods and pay hefty fines. The guest workers program
contained in the bill endorsed by Bush recalls the infamous Bracero
program. It is designed to put workers completely at the mercy
of corporate employers while stripping them of the few rights
they currently enjoy.
As part of its crackdown on immigration, the government is
contracting for the building of privately run detention centers
along the US-Mexican border.
The liberal and church groups sponsoring the May 1 protests
have sought to orient their protests to pressuring the Democratic
Party, depicting the dispute in Congress over immigration as that
between reform and anti-reform factions. In fact, the Democrats
and Republicans are united in their hostility to granting basic
democratic rights to immigrant workers.
Typical is the position of Senator Hillary Clinton. When asked
her opinion on granting amnesty to undocumented workers at the
recent debate between contenders for the Democratic presidential
nomination, she replied, Well, Im in favor of comprehensive
immigration reform, which includes tightening our border security,
sanctioning employers of undocumented immigrants, helping our
communities deal with the costs that come from illegal immigration....
After 9/11 weve got to know whos in this country.
And then give them a chance to pay a fine, pay back taxes, learn
English and stand in line to be eligible for a legal status in
this country.
Among the tens of thousands who joined the march through downtown
Los Angeles were many young people, including students from Roosevelt
High and Wilson High Schools in East Los Angeles as well a large
number of workers.
Quiroz, an immigrant construction worker who has won legal
status in the US, told the World Socialist Web Site, When
I compare my own experience with recent immigrants, it is like
night and day. Immigrants today live in fear; they can be taken
at any time. When they try to find work, they have to produce
documents. Everyone hopes for an amnesty. There is a rumor that
if there is a guest worker program like Bush wants, there will
be a $10,000 fee for immigrants to become legal. That will be
beyond the reach of most immigrants. It does not make sense
for workers to be divided on this issue. Immigrant and US workers
work in the same jobs, shoulder to shoulder.
Jessica, a 20-year-old garment worker, told the WSWS, I
am angry because I think that the government must stop threatening
people and carrying out raids in factories or against immigrants,
like the one in that Chicago shopping center a few days ago. People
live in fear, and are often afraid to leave their homes to go
shopping and to go to school.
Leyla and Claudio, who came to the United States 20 years ago,
fleeing the civil war in El Salvador, also marched. We saw
terrible things and fled our country with little more than our
lives, said Claudio. I reject the demand for guest
workers; there must be a generalized legalization.
Leyla added, Conditions for immigrants are scandalous.
Like us, many immigrants are part of the so-called informal economy
because getting a job is difficult. We peddle things in the street.
Undocumented immigrants suffer a lot of unemployment.
Francisco, a young construction worker who has been in the
US for 11 years, told the WSWS , There has been an increase
in raids, in Ontario, in Orange County and in the fields. That
has to stop. People are afraid that they will be separated from
their families. My deepest hope is that all immigrants will be
legalized. However, I dont think that this will happen;
we have a long struggle ahead.
I came from Guatemala. There are few jobs, and many people
are forced to come to the United States. It is an arduous trip
that can take weeks, months sometimes. More and more, the Mexican
police tries to interfere with the immigrants from Central America.
Concepción, 55, is a garment worker and a Mexican Indian
from Veracruz Province. She told the WSWS that her cousin is being
deported in three weeks. She has a 14-year-old son who was
born here, she said. She pleaded with the immigration
people to let her stay. It was no use. Her son had broken his
leg, and ICE allowed her to stay until the cast came off. Now
they told her she has to leave because her child can get therapy
in Mexico.
If people get deported, there will be more families split
up. The children will suffer most. I came from Mexico 20 years
ago and became a garment worker. It is hard in the factories because
the boss is constantly trying to cut costs by firing the workers
with seniority and hiring new sewing machine operators at a lower
wage, below minimum wage. Workers do not get more for working
overtime. A lot of us become independent. We pick up cloth and
sew it at home. I make tablecloths.
Thousands also joined a march in Detroit that began in Patton
Park. Among them was Carlos, who told the WSWS, If you look
at it, every person in this country is from another country, except
the Native Americans. If it is not you, it is your parents or
your grandparents. I dont understand why some people are
not for the immigrants in this country. It is bad. Families are
being separated from each other. There is a family in San Diego
with three children, all under 18 years old, and their mother
and father were deported and sent to Mexico. I think the children
were 16, 13 and 10. It reminds me of the time they took the Cuban
boy and would not return him to his father. These people, say
they are for families and rights, but there they did not care
for the family at all.
Patricia Palmino, also on the Detroit march, condemned the
growing deportations of immigrants. These are workers who
are here to work, not to take someones job. They are here
just to make a better life. You know that many of the Mexican
workers work very hard and they do jobs other people do not want
to do. Yet they receive much less money. Now, there is a new policy
that if you are an undocumented, you cant go to university.
I believe you should have the right to go.
I have a sister-in-law who has a son that did not have
a Social Security number. He was only nine years old and needed
to go to school, but they would not let him in the school. His
dad went to the Mexican consul and did all kinds of things, and
finally they got him a PIN number. A nine-year-old kid should
be in school, whether they have a PIN number or not. The children
are our future.
Mindy Melete Lares, who is Puerto Rican, said she came to the
march in Detroit to support immigrant rights. I am opposed
to what this government is doing. Bush, I think he is a direct
descendent of the Nazis. He doesnt care. I came here 50
years ago. When I came, they were looking for more workers and
brought immigrants into the country. Now, look at how they treat
immigrants.
Ramon Antonio, who came to the march with his young daughter,
told the WSWS, I work two jobs to make ends meet. I am doing
this for my kids. There is nothing in Mexico for decent jobs.
Thats why we are here.
George and Carlos are middle-school students who attended the
march and rally. Both of them said most of their friends did not
go to school today in order to attend the rally.

George said, I think it is not right to send all the
immigrants back. I believe they should have rights just like everyone
here. They work and pay taxes like everyone. I think they should
be treated the same.
Carlos agreed: I think we should have the right to stay.
I have been here since I was nine years old.
One of the largest demonstrations in the country took place
in Chicago, where hundreds of thousands marched through downtown
to Grant Park.
Abundio Ramirez, a practicing immigration lawyer in Chicago
for the last four years, said that he had joined the march to
support his clients.
Theyre not here for amnesty, he said. Theres
a lot of anger about IRAIRA [Illegal Immigration and Immigrant
Responsibility Act of 1996], which brought reinstatement and a
10-year permanent bar. This destroys families. Theres a
build-up of anger and frustration, and they are here to change
policy. Its like Prohibition in the 1920s. The moment they
allowed alcohol to be sold and bought, it stopped the breaking
of that law. The same can go for immigration.
See Also:
Southern Poverty Law Center
report
Slave labor conditions under US guestworker program
[14 March 2007]
More than 300 seized in Massachusetts
immigration raid
[9 March 2007]
US immigration agents
arrest 1,282 in raids at six meatpacking plants
[14 December 2006]
US: Pentagon prepares
for use of force on Mexican border
[18 May 2006]
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