20 million U.S. immigrants could face deportation
>> Tuesday, August 21, 2018
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
Since Donald J. Trump
was elected President, legal and illegal immigrants are no longer safe from
deportation even when they follow the law to a tee. According to
news reports, the Trump administration is “expected to issue a proposal in
coming weeks that would make it harder for legal immigrants and illegal
immigrants to become citizens.”
Other reports
said that Trump’s plan to deport them, which doesn’t need congressional
approval, was part of White House senior adviser Stephen Miller’s plan to limit
the number of immigrants who could obtain legal status in the U.S. each
year. His goal is to cut legal immigration in half and get rid of
all illegal immigrants.
Who is
Stephen Miller?
Stephen
Miller is Trump’s 32-year old senior policy advisor, speechwriter, anti-immigration
policy chief, and right-hand troll. A known provocateur, Miller is a
white nationalist who supports rightwing, white supremacist, and alt-right
causes. An observer once described him as someone who “likes getting
s rise out of people in a very sociopathic way.”
In his job in
the White House, Miller developed policies such as the barring of individuals
from Muslim majority countries, cuts to legal immigration, family separation,
and the rescission of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA).
He used his
influence in the White House to subvert bipartisan legislation that would have
provided permanent protections for “Dreamers.” Dreamers are the young people –
mostly Hispanic – who benefitted from former President Barack Obama’s DACA executive
order when the DREAM Act -- Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors
-- failed to pass in Congress several times.
In September
2017, Trump rescinded DACA that has kept nearly 800,000 young immigrants from
deportation since 2012. Recently, he fashioned Trump’s controversial
“Zero Tolerance Policy” that forcibly separated migrant children from their
parents at the US-Mexico border. And now, Miller’s ultimate dream of
ridding the country of immigrants is about to become a reality.
But Miller
seems to be running away from reality in regard to his family
roots. His uncle David Glosser, a retired neuropsychologist and
Miller’s uncle on his mother’s side, said that Miller’s great-great-grandfather
Wolf-Leib Glosser left the village of Antopol in what is now Belarus amid
“violent anti-Jewish pogroms” there and came to the US. He landed on
Ellis Island in 1903 and within a few years was able to bring over the rest of
his family.
“I have
watched with dismay and increasing horror as my nephew, who is an educated man
and well aware of his heritage, has become the architect of immigration
policies that repudiate the very foundation of our family’s life in this
country,” Glosser wrote.
Miller’s
blueprint
Miller’s
master plan is to deport immigrants – legal and illegal – based on what he
believed are “violations” of immigration laws. His rulemaking
proposal targets legal immigrants (green card holders) in the U.S. who have
used or whose household members have used the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or
Obamacare, Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP), Food Stamp and other social programs, including the
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) for the aged.
For
participating in these social programs, illegal immigrants could be hindered
from obtaining legal status, while legal immigrants’ application for
citizenship could be imperiled. In both cases, “violators” could be
deported. Those hardest hit are immigrants, mostly people of color,
who are working in low-paying jobs that are not enough to support their
families.
The
crux of the matter is in a document called “affidavit of support,” which is
required of all sponsors to execute. Basically, it is a
document an individual (sponsor) signs to accept financial responsibility
for another person (new immigrant), usually a relative, who is coming to the
United States to live permanently.
An affidavit
of support is legally enforceable; the sponsor's responsibility usually lasts
until the family member or other individual either becomes a U.S. citizen, or
can be credited with 40 quarters of work (usually 10 years). [Source: US
Citizenship and Immigration Services]
The
anti-immigrant blueprint designed by Miller and his white nationalist cohorts
in the Trump administration first came to fruition in the early months of the
Trump presidency. The White House is currently reviewing the
draft and once Trump approves it, it will be published in the Federal Register;
thus, making it a law of the land.
Elderly immigrants
One of
the groups that would be hardest hit by Miller’s anti-immigration initiative
are elderly immigrants who were sponsored by their children under the Family
Reunification law, which Trump refers to as “chain
migration.”
Since a majority
of them were admitted to the U.S. in their senior years, they don’t have Social
Security benefits and therefore don’t have any earnings or
income. As such, they would qualify to receive SSI
benefits. In addition, SSI is also used to help blind and disabled
people, who have little or no income. It also provides cash to meet
basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter.
The Family
Reunification law allows the immigration of “immediate relatives” of US
citizens, which is not subject to any annual visa numerical
limits. Immediate relatives are: (1) Spouses and unmarried children
of US citizens; (2) Parents of US citizens; and (3) Widows, widowers, and
children of deceased US citizens.
Chain
migration
Another
anti-immigration policy that Miller has been working on is “chain
migration.” On January 8, 2018, The
Hill reported: “Miller pushed the White House message
on immigration reform, calling for a border wall and an end to
‘chain’ migration, the process by which an immigrant can petition to
bring family members to the United States, as well as the adjustment
of the country's visa lottery system.”
But didn’t
Miller realize that it was chain migration that made it possible for his family
to enter the U.S. beginning in 1903?
It is
interesting to note New York Times’ headline on August 9, 2018 that
says: “Melania Trump’s Parents Become U.S. Citizens, Using ‘Chain
Migration’ Trump Hates.” The report said that Trump’s Slovenian
in-laws, Viktor and Amalija Knavs, became US citizens by taking advantage of
the Family Reunification program. When their lawyer, Michael Wildes,
was asked if the Knavses had obtained citizenship through “chain migration,”
which Trump has repeatedly and vehemently denounced, he said, “I
suppose. Chain migration is a ‘dirtier’ way of characterizing the
bedrock of our immigration process when it comes to family reunification.”
Punishing
immigrants
Among the
ethnic groups of immigrants that would suffer most under these changes to
immigration laws are Filipinos. Filipinos, who are known for their close family
ties, are arguably the largest group of citizens and legal immigrants who have
sponsored their elderly parents to avail of Family Reunification Laws.
One month
into Trump’s administration, a draft executive order under consideration would
have widespread chilling effects for legal immigrants including the prospective
ones who have been waiting for many years – as much as 20 years -- to reunify
with their relatives.
Trump started
attacking the process of sponsoring relatives as “chain immigration” and he
vowed to stop it. But it’s not limited to legal
immigrants. He also targeted illegal immigrants.
Once
implemented, this sinister attempt to punish immigrants could result in mass
deportation of an estimated 20 million legal and illegal immigrants --
Filipinos and other people of color.
At no time in
US history had this uprooting of immigrant families had been tried
before. However, the large number of Filipinos working in the healthcare
industry could have a crippling effect in hospitals, clinics, medical and
nursing professions, and the elderly care home industry, which is growing fast
due to the 60 million aging “baby boomers.”
If
Trump proceeds with the deportation of an estimated 20 million immigrants, the
result could be catastrophic to the healthcare, agricultural, hotel and
entertainment, sanitation, information technology, and other industries, which
would have a crippling effect on the economy for lack of qualified
professionals and skilled workers. (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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