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Tens of thousands march against immigration raids in the US
By Rafael Azul
3 May 2008
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Tens of thousands of workers and students marched in dozens
of US cities on May 1 to defend the rights of undocumented workers
and all other immigrants. There were demonstrations in Los Angeles
and a score of other cities, including Washington, Milwaukee,
New York, Chicago, Seattle, Boston, Houston, Dallas and Detroit.
The protesters denounced government raids on factories and
demanded the legislation of the more than 12 million undocumented
workers who live in the United States. Many protesters also carried
signs demanding drivers licenses for undocumented workers,
denouncing high gasoline prices, and demanding an end to the war
on Iraq. The march included many legal residents with relatives
who are undocumented and were afraid to protest themselves.
The marches, set to coincide with international day of workers
solidarity, were much smaller than in 2006 when nearly 1.5 million
workers marched in Los Angeles and Chicago, joined by hundreds
of thousands in nearly 100 other cities to protest against legislation
passed by the US House of Representatives that would have turned
every undocumented worker in the US into a felon, subject to imprisonment.
The same bill would have made it criminal for any US citizen,
including medical professionals, social workers and teachers,
to provide any services to immigrants without visas.
In contrast, the numbers this time were much more modest, with
about 10,000 marching in Los Angeles and less than 5,000 in New
York City. Sizeable demonstrations also took place in Chicago
and Milwaukee, while only a few hundred turned out in Houston
and San Francisco. The immigrant marchers were mostly from Mexico
and Central America, while other participants came from the Caribbean,
South Korea and the Philippines.
No doubt the decrease in the number of demonstrators was attributable
in no small degree to the climate of fear created by the record
numbers of deportations and immigration raids carried out by the
government over the past year, and the generalized demonization
of undocumented workers promoted by both major political parties
as well as the mass media. According to the figures recorded by
the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, deportations from
the US have increased by close to 60 percent since 2005.
Meanwhile, the virtual militarization of the US-Mexican border
has had the effect of trapping Mexican immigrants in the USestimated
at 11 millioncutting them off from the families they left
behind in search of work in the north.
This section of the working class has also been hit the hardest
by the deepening economic crisis, which has had a particular impact
upon construction jobs, a major source of employment for immigrant
workers. On the eve of the demonstration, the Inter-American Development
Bank reported that some 3 million Latin American immigrants in
the US have stopped sending money home to their families over
the past two years as a result of the deteriorating economic conditions.
Senate Republicans, meanwhile, are preparing to introduce new
legislation next week to criminalize and persecute undocumented
immigrants in the US. The proposed bill would mandate the imprisonment
of immigrants caught crossing the border, create obstacles for
the undocumented opening bank accounts, and require that all those
communicating with federal agencies do so in English. The legislation
would also cut federal funding for states issuing drivers
licenses to undocumented immigrants, and for cities that do not
allow their police forces to arrest people based upon their immigration
status.
Those who demonstrated did so in defiance of this wave of repression.
In Los Angeles, over 700 high school students joined the protest,
together with workers from a factory that was raided by the government
earlier this year.
In Milwaukee, marchers chanted slogans demanding that Democratic
candidates Clinton and Obama take a stand against immigration
raids. Since 2006, Minnesota and Iowa meat packing plants have
been aggressively targeted for immigration raids by the Immigration
and Customs Enforcement agency of the US government (ICE).
In this years protests, organizers placed an emphasis
on voter registration and the upcoming elections. According to
the Los Angeles Times, groups such as the Coalition for
Humane Immigrant Rights, the We Are America Alliance and the SEIU,
groups that support the Democratic Party are focusing on encouraging
legal immigrants to apply for US citizenship and register to vote.
At the Chicago protest, some workers indicated that they would
vote for whichever candidate has a stronger program on this issue.
This will prove to be a dead-end strategy. Neither of the two
contenders for the Democratic Partys presidential nomination,
Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, nor Senator John McCain,
the Republican candidate, have shown any inclination to advance
policies aimed at ending the repression of immigrants and granting
them basic rights as workers.
Clinton has combined tough talk on border enforcement and on
the treatment of immigrants convicted of a crimeshe is for
immediate deportationwith support for some form of guest
worker program assuring agribusiness and other sections of employers
with a secure supply of cheap labor. Obamas main disagreement
with Clinton on this issue appears to be over drivers licenses
for undocumented immigrantsshe is against granting licenses,
he is in favor.
On the Republican side, McCain, a former supporter of the guest
worker program, now favors shutting down the US border with Mexico.
In her comment on the protests, Clinton promised to introduce
an immigration bill during her first 100 days in office. Senator
Obama refrained from any concrete proposal and instead called
on all immigrants to fight for their demands by registering to
vote.
None of these candidates have seriously addressed the human
cost of the current immigration policy. Over four thousand immigrants
have died crossing the US-Mexico border since Operation Gatekeeper
was instituted under President Bill Clinton in 1994. This operation,
a bi-partisan measure, was designed to severely restrict access
for immigrants from Mexico and Central America and served to divert
the inevitable flow of migrants into the punishing desert.
Since then Democratic and Republican politicians alike have
acted to further repress the movement of immigrants, effectively
subordinating the human rights of this section of the working
class to the profit needs of US businesses. This is the case both
in relation to supposed Democratic liberals like Obama and Clinton
and those attempting to appeal to the xenophobia of the extreme
right wing, like McCain.
In California and elsewhere across the country, businesses
engaged in agriculture, construction and light manufacturing have
begun to raise concerns over the increase in government raids
and the generalized crackdown on immigrants. According to the
Los Angeles Times, last year there were 4,900 raids on
factories, 21 times more than in 2001. The number of undocumented
immigrants arrested between 2001 and 2007 jumped 870 percent,
from 510 to 4,940. In some cases, single parents were unable to
return home, leaving their children abandoned.
This year over a dozen raids took place in Los Angeles County.
In the suburb of Van Nuys, 130 immigrants were arrested in a raid
on Micro Solutions, a manufacturer of ink-jet supplies. That is
not good for business, according to Jack Kyser, chief economist
of the Los Angeles County Development Corporation, which recently
released a study that found that tens of thousands of jobs would
be lost in the furniture, food and fashion industries if even
a few of these companies were forced to leave the state as a consequence
of immigration raids.
Despite the protests, ICE raids will continue. Even as immigration
rallies took place across the nation, Michael Chertoff, who heads
the Department of Homeland Security, wrote in an opinion piece
in the Department of Homeland Security Departments Leadership
Journal that when it comes to illegal immigration, the
American people are tired of thirty years of lip service. They
want our laws enforced... I have directed my department to pursue
that mandate, using all the tools permitted by law. He stated
that the department will drive businesses to comply with
laws against employing illegal workers, and when we
encounter those who are here illegally, ICE will remove
them.
See Also:
Connecticut, US: local police
deputized to pursue immigrants
[13 February 2008]
Anti-immigrant demagogue
Lou Dobbs speaks in Detroit
[6 December 2007]
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