Gov. Schwarzenegger: Congress refuses to talk
seriously about immigration, so the rest of us have to pick up the slack.
By
LA Times
BY NOT FINISHING comprehensive immigration reform this year, Congress
left behind a poisoned debate that will continue to fuel a growing anger in our
country.
Latino leaders, meeting in
Now Congress has walked away from the debate, at least for this year. So
it's up to the rest of us to tone down our rhetoric and listen to the voices on
all sides. As both an immigrant to this country and a proud American citizen, I
have a unique perspective on this debate. I also have some advice.
To the immigrant rights activists I say: Change your message. When I came to
Being an immigrant is like being a guest in someone's house. Your hosts go
about their daily routine. You can sit on the couch and do your own thing, or
you can ask, "What can I do to help? How can I be a part of this
household?"
What people see today when immigrant rights activists march in the streets
carrying Mexican flags and angry signs is that you do not want to join
I do not believe that this is the message most Mexican immigrants - legal or
illegal - wish to send. I believe that most Mexican immigrants are as proud to
be part of
To those who believe illegal immigration is reaching a crisis level in this
country I say: Tone down the rhetoric. I myself have said things that caused
division even when that was not my intent. Words can be weapons. We must be
careful to distinguish between legal and illegal immigration, between those who
break our laws to do us harm and those who break our laws to find freedom and
prosperity in the greatest nation on Earth. It is hypocritical for Congress to
condemn people for coming here illegally when the federal government has been
unwilling to do what it takes to stop them from coming in the first place.
Now that they are here, what do we do? Amnesty is not the answer. Congress
granted amnesty in 1986 and promised it would end the problem. It didn't.
Amnesty only made it worse. You don't reward people for breaking the law. And
you don't grant someone the rights of citizenship simply by virtue of how long
they have been in this country illegally - that makes a mockery of the law and
penalizes those who waited years and followed the rules.
But it is not realistic either to round up 12 million people and send them
home. Many have families here now, children and grandchildren who are citizens.
Splitting them up would be inhumane. Some say it would cost as much as $250
billion to even try. Who would pay for that? It is simply not realistic.
The answer, as I have repeatedly said, is, first, to secure the border to stop
the problem from getting worse. Second, we must create a temporary-worker
program so people can come here legally to work. We should also lift the cap on
work visas for industries such as technology, engineering and agriculture so
immigrants can be hired when there are not enough
Unfortunately, we must wait for Congress to return next year to take up the
critical issue of comprehensive immigration reform. Meanwhile, we must do all
we can to stop the problem from getting worse and to maintain a civil debate
about illegal immigration.