Divide and Deport: On Immigration, Thom Hartmann 
and Lou Dobbs Have Much in Common
By David Bacon
Working In these Times, Feb 28, 2011
http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/7007/divide_and_deport_on_immigrants_thom_hartmann_and_lou_dobbs_have_much_/


Radio host and author Thom Hartmann has a new 
book, Rebooting the American Dream. Hartmann has 
a progressive reputation, and his book supports 
unions, calls for eliminating tax cuts for the 
rich and advocates other sensible ideas. But like 
many liberals, when it comes to immigration his 
tune changes.

In one chapter, Hartmann says he wants to "Put 
Lou Dobbs Out to Pasture."  But Hartmann, like 
Dobbs, criticizes corporate power and then turns 
his fire on workers and immigrants. Instead of 
taking Lou Dobbs on, Hartmann repeats many of the 
stereotypes and falsehoods that gave Dobbs a 
reputation as one of the most anti-immigrant 
commentators in U.S. media. Hartmann, like Dobbs, 
claims to speak for the interests of working 
people. And his ideas do reflect the thinking of 
a certain section of the U.S. working class. That 
makes it important to understand the impact of 
his recommendations.

There has always been a conflict in U.S. labor 
about immigration. Conservatives historically 
sought to restrict unions and jobs to the native 
born, to whites and to men, and saw immigrants as 
job competitors-the enemy.

This was part of an overall perspective that saw 
unions as businesses or insurance programs, in 
which workers paid dues and got benefits in 
return.  Labor's radicals, however, from the IWW 
through the CIO to those in many unions today, 
see the labor movement as inclusive, with a 
responsibility to organize all workers, immigrant 
and native-born alike.  They see unions as part 
of a broader movement for social change in 
general.
   
In 1986, the AFL-CIO supported the Immigration 
Reform and Control Act, because it contained 
employer sanctions. This provision said employers 
could only hire people with legal immigration 
status.  In effect, the law made it a federal 
crime for an undocumented person to hold a job. 
Since passage of the law, immigration raids have 
led to firings and deportations of thousands of 
people in workplaces across the country.  In many 
cases employers have used the law as a way to 
intimidate immigrant workers, and rid themselves 
of those trying to organize unions and protest 
bad wages and conditions.

Transnational corporations invest in developing 
countries like Mexico, moving production to 
wherever wages are lowest.  Treaties like the 
North American Free Trade Agreement promote low 
wages, privatization, the dumping of agricultural 
products, and other conditions that increase 
corporate profits.  But those measures also 
impoverish and displace people, forcing them to 
migrate to survive.

When those displaced people arrive in the United 
States, corporate employers use their hunger and 
vulnerability to enforce a system of low wages 
and fear.  In this system, corporations are aided 
by U.S. immigration laws. While they're always 
presented in the media as a means of controlling 
borders, and keeping people from crossing them, 
for the last hundred years they've been the means 
of regulating the supply, and consequently the 
price, of immigrant labor.

When the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 
1986 criminalized work for undocumented 
immigrants, it was a subsidy or gift to 
employers.  When working becomes illegal, it's 
much harder for workers to organize unions, go on 
strike, and fight for better conditions.

Immigration agents now check documents workers 
must fill out to get a job, and require employers 
to fire those whose documents are in question. 
In Washington state, they did this in the middle 
of a union drive among apple workers, and fired 
700 people.  That organizing effort was broken. 
Smithfield Foods cooperated in raids and firings 
at its huge Tarheel, North Carolina meatpacking 
plant.  Workers only overcame the terror they 
caused when citizens and immigrants, African 
Americans and Mexicans, agreed to defend the jobs 
of all workers, and the right of everyone to join 
the union.  When they won their union drive as a 
result in 2007, it was the largest private-sector 
union victory in years.

Immigrants are fighters.  In 1992 the drywallers 
stopped construction for a year from Santa 
Barbara to the Mexican border.  They've gone on 
strike at factories, office buildings, laundries, 
hotels and fields.  Some unions today are 
growing, and they're mostly the ones that know 
immigrant workers will fight to make things 
better.  The battles fought by immigrants over 
the last twenty years changed the politics of 
cities like Los Angeles, and are helping to make 
unions strong today.

Because of experiences like these, in 1999 the 
previous AFL-CIO support for employer sanctions 
was overturned by grassroots immigrant rights 
coalitions and labor councils around the country. 
The federation's new position called for 
repealing sanctions, for protecting the 
organizing rights of all workers, and for a new 
amnesty program to legalize workers already here.

Dividing workers won't improve wages, standards

In the context of this progressive movement, Thom 
Hartmann's proposals go backward.

Hartmann says, "So long as employers are willing 
and able (without severe penalties) to hire 
illegal workers, people will risk life and limb 
to grab at the America Dream. When we stop hiring 
and paying them, most will leave of their own 
volition over a few years, and the remaining few 
who are committed to the United States will 
obtain citizenship through normal channels."

People are coming to the United States because of 
the poverty in their home countries. That poverty 
is in large part the product of NAFTA, CAFTA, 
corporate trade agreements, and market reforms to 
make those countries friendly to investors. No 
matter how many walls are built on the border, or 
laws passed to deny people their rights or 
ability to work, people will do what it take for 
their families to survive. That means people will 
migrate so long as the U.S. creates the 
conditions that force them to.

Making it illegal for people to work here in the 
U.S. simply makes people vulnerable, and makes 
organizing harder and riskier. Mississippi, for 
instance, passed a law making it a felony 
punishable by 5 years in state prison and a 
$10,000 fine for someone to work without papers. 
That law was proposed by supporters of the old 
White Citizens' Councils.

Immigration to Mississippi didn't stop after the 
law was passed. No one went home.  But the state 
has some of the lowest wages and the fewest 
unions in the U.S.  That law was fought by the 
legislature's Black Caucus and by its progressive 
unions, who wanted workers, immigrants included, 
to have more rights, not fewer.

Hartmann is also factually wrong. It is not 
possible for undocumented workers to "obtain 
citizenship through normal channels," as he 
asserts, without changing U.S. laws, which he 
opposes.

Hartmann appeals for the support of native-born 
workers, calling for "protecting the labor 
market" by driving immigrant workers out of it 
using employer sanctions and immigration raids. 
This will keep wages up, he claims. This was the 
rationale for the old position that progressive 
trade unionists changed in 1999. Hartmann's 
argument historically was used, not just against 
immigrants, but against other people as well.  It 
justified the color lines that kept Black workers 
and other workers of color and women out of many 
jobs and industries, and out of some unions too.

Hartmann criticizes corporations for attacking 
working people, but then ignores the fundamental 
role that workers themselves play in that 
conflict. The reason why wages and living 
standards in the U.S. go up is because of the 
organizing efforts of workers themselves. Uniting 
people together is the essential requirement for 
organizing. Hartmann's drive against immigrants 
sets workers against each other instead, making 
it harder for workers to unite to organize and 
strike.

"Protecting the labor market" is a throwback to 
the era when unions limited themselves to 
representing a select few skilled workers, trying 
to keep their number low by limiting access to 
craft skills and job opportunities.  In many 
cases, those limits were imposed by color lines 
and sex discrimination.  That idea was defeated 
first by the organizing of industrial unions, 
which brought all workers together regardless of 
race, sex or immigration status, and then by the 
civil rights movement, which tore many of those 
barriers down.

Hartmann says he wants to "bring back the 
unions," and supports the Employee Free Choice 
Act, which would make union organizing easier. 
But organizing rights need to be extended for all 
workers, and his anti-immigrant prescriptions 
would create a two-tier workforce in which some 
workers have those rights while others do not.

Then he attacks those unions who do help 
immigrant workers to organize and advocate for 
their rights:  "It's equally astonishing to hear 
unions going along with this [advocating for the 
rights of the undocumented] (in the desperate 
hope of picking up new members) and embracing 
illegal immigration."  Hartmann says he believes 
in high wages, but then attacks workers and 
unions when they fight for them.

His grasp on labor history is equally shaky. 
Hartmann says, "The history of the labor struggle 
in America has always been about securing wages 
and benefits that provide a decent living for 
workers and their families. And the best way to 
guarantee that is by making sure the labor market 
is not flooded. Working Americans have always 
known this simple equation: more workers, lower 
wages; fewer workers, higher wages."  He 
continues:  "They limited labor-hours by 
supporting laws that would regulate immigration 
into the United States to a small enough flow 
that it wouldn't dilute the unionized labor pool."

Hartmann treats the long struggle to limit work 
hours as the same as efforts to stop immigration 
and deny rights to immigrants.  That's not true. 
The fight for the eight-hour day and basic 
protections for workers had nothing to do with 
fighting against immigration or immigrants.

In fact, the people who fought the hardest for 
shorter hours were the people who worked the 
longest ones-starting with the immigrants, women 
and African American workers in Chicago 
packinghouses and garment sweatshops.  Some of 
the Haymarket martyrs, who gave their lives for 
the 8-hour day in Chicago, were immigrants 
themselves. They never said that the way to get 
better conditions was to attack immigrants. They 
called on all workers to unite and organize 
together, and gave their lives for their beliefs.

Cesar Chavez and undocumented workers

In order to make his anti-immigrant prejudice 
seem one shared with Chicanos and Mexicans 
themselves, Hartmann repeats a common 
misconception about Cesar Chavez and the farm 
workers movement.  He says, "Even as major a 
labor figure as César Chávez, the co-founder of 
the United Farm Workers (UFW) union, fought 
against illegal immigration, and the UFW turned 
in undocumented workers during his tenure as 
president. "

Chavez and the UFW organized all farm workers, 
people with visas and the undocumented, together. 
Many of the union's most active members and 
leaders have been undocumented.  The union fought 
to make sure that California's Agricultural Labor 
Relations Act, that gave the state's farm workers 
the right to organize, didn't keep undocumented 
workers from exercising that right.  The union 
fought against immigration raids, especially 
during strikes and organizing drives.

Chavez did call for turning in undocumented 
workers to the Border Patrol, for which he was 
criticized strongly by union members and other 
community and labor activists like Bert Corona. 
But he did this because growers and the Border 
Patrol colluded to bring in undocumented people 
as strikebreakers.  Chavez was against 
strikebreaking, and believed that all workers 
have the right to organize. Undocumented workers 
have always made up most of the members of his 
union.

Hartmann says, "So a snapshot of the labor 
situation in March 2010 shows us that there were 
more than 32 million Americans who were 
unemployed or underemployed.  At the same time, 
the number of illegal immigrants in the United 
States quadrupled from 3 million in 1980 to 
almost 12 million in 2008, 6 no doubt diluting 
our labor pool. A parallel trend not entirely 
unrelated-shows that the percentage of the 
private workforce in the United States that was 
unionized declined from roughly 25 percent in the 
early 1980s to around 7 percent in 2009."

Undocumented workers don't create unemployment. 
They didn't shut down 12 GM plants after the 
company got the bailout.  The company did, with 
the agreement of the government.  Undocumented 
workers didn't cut California's state budget or 
refuse to raise taxes, resulting in the layoff of 
thousands of teachers and public workers. 
Immigrants are not responsible for this economic 
recession.  The banks and the government that 
deregulated them are responsible, as the recent 
report on the roots of the recession clearly 
shows.  The operation of this economic system in 
the interests of large corporations and the 
wealthy produces periodic recessions and high 
unemployment, and has done so for over 150 years, 
in periods both of high and low migration.

Blaming the undocumented for the decline of the 
labor movement is not only false, it's 
ridiculous.  After spending much of his book 
criticizing corporations for attacking unions, he 
blames workers themselves for the decline in 
union membership.  In actual fact, immigrant 
workers, including the undocumented, have been 
the heart of many of the most important union 
organizing efforts for two decades:  Justice for 
Janitors,  Smithfield, Hotel Workers Rising, the 
great grape strike, the Southern California 
drywall strike, and many others.  The energy and 
commitment of thousands of immigrants, united 
with that of people born here, is what is keeping 
unions alive and helping them to grow.  Instead 
of supporting these efforts, Hartmann attacks the 
unions that fight for the rights of immigrant 
workers.

Hartmann equates guest worker programs with the 
legalization of undocumented people.  Guest 
worker programs, described as "close to slavery" 
by the Southern Poverty Law Center, allow big 
employers and labor contractors to bring people 
to the U.S. on the condition that people have to 
work in order to stay.  If they organize or 
protest illegal conditions, their employer can 
have them deported.  Legalization means that 
people without papers who are already here get a 
residence permit, which gives them the ability to 
live a normal life.  No employer can threaten to 
deport them because employers have nothing to do 
with their visas.

The difference between legalization and guest 
worker programs is the difference between having 
rights and not having rights.  That's why the 
AFL-CIO has opposed guest worker programs, while 
supporting the legalization of the undocumented.

Why deportation doesn't boost wages

Finally, Hartmann says that if the undocumented 
are fired or deported, prices will rise because 
employers will have to pay higher wages. But then 
he cautions readers that we should be willing to 
accept those higher prices. This is an argument 
employers have always used to justify low wages - 
that higher wages will mean higher prices.  It's 
even used to justify sending production out of 
the country-cutting labor costs supposedly brings 
us cheap tennis shoes and I-pods.  But it has 
always been a false argument.

First, deporting people doesn't produce higher 
wages. When workers get deported, employers 
simply find other workers desperate for jobs. The 
Chipotle fast food restaurants recently fired 600 
people in Minnesota because they were 
undocumented.  But the company didn't raise wages 
to attract new workers, and the price of their 
burritos stayed the same.

Second, wages only represent a small fraction of 
the price of most consumer products. Less than 5% 
of the price of a box of strawberries or a dress 
winds up in the pocket of a farm worker or 
seamstress. Employers could double wages and 
absorb the increased cost, and still make 
handsome profits.

Why don't they?  Because workers have to force 
them to do this.   If farm workers or sewing 
machine operators want higher wages they have to 
organize unions and fight for them.  That 
requires including all the workers in a field or 
factory, not just a privileged few.

Any union organizer can explain these basic facts 
of working-class life, as can most progressive 
workers. The true test of whether Thom Hartmann 
is on their side isn't just how much he 
criticizes big corporations.  Lou Dobbs 
criticizes them too.  The test is whether he 
stands for equality and the rights of all workers 
and their families.


For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org

See also Illegal People -- How Globalization 
Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants 
(Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the 
U.S./Mexico Border (University of California, 
2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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