Bush Unveils Plan Giving Legal Status to Illegal Aliens
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2004
WASHINGTON President Bush called Wednesday for a major
overhaul of America's immigration system to grant legal status to
millions of illegal-alien workers in the United States.
"Out of common sense and fairness, our laws should allow
willing workers to enter our country and fill jobs that Americans
are not filling," the president said in an East Room speech to
members of Congress, his Cabinet and immigrant advocacy groups.
Bush's election-year proposal is designed to win support among
Hispanic voters while helping meet the needs of American employers.
His plan would create a temporary worker program for illegal aliens now in the United States and those in other countries who
have been offered employment here.
"As a nation that values immigrants and depends on immigrants,
we should have immigration laws that work and make us proud," the
president said. "Yet today we do not. Instead we see many
employers turning to the illegal labor market. We see millions of
hard-working men and women condemned to fear and insecurity in a
massive undocumented economy.
"Illegal entry across our borders makes more difficult the
urgent task of securing the homeland," the president said.
Bush said his proposals, if enacted by Congress, would provide a
more compassionate system for those who now live in the
shadows of American society.
"Decent, hard-working people will now be protected by labor
laws with the right to change jobs, earn fair wages and enjoy the
same working conditions that the law requires for American
workers," the president said.
While offering new opportunities for undocumented workers, Bush
said the proposal would not provide blanket amnesty for foreigners
who are in the United States illegally.
'I Oppose Amnesty'
"I oppose amnesty, placing undocumented workers on the
automatic path to citizenship," he said. "Granting amnesty
encourages violation of our laws and perpetuates illegal
immigration. America is a welcoming country, but citizenship must
not be the automatic reward for violating the laws of America."
Bush said his proposals would strengthen America's borders and
make the nation more secure by providing more accountability of
those who enter the United States. He said it also would allow law
enforcement officials to focus more on "real" threats.
'Our Borders Should Be Open ...'
"America is acting on a basic belief: Our borders should be
open to legal travel and honest trade; our borders should be shut
and barred tight to criminals, to drug traders, drug traffickers
and to criminals and to terrorists."
Bush called Mexican President Vicente Fox to brief him before
announcing his proposals.
Bush's proposals break a virtual silence on immigration since
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks raised fears about border security.
The president argues that his plan would make America safer by
giving the government a better idea of who was crossing U.S.
borders, bolster the economy by meeting employers' need for willing
low-wage workers, and fulfill a mandate for compassion by
guaranteeing the rights and legitimacy of illegal workers.
By dangling the prospect of legal status to the 8 million
illegal aliens estimated to be in this country, about half
of them Mexican, Bush was granting a top priority of the business
community while making his most aggressive move yet to court
Hispanic voters, the nation's fastest-growing electoral bloc.
He won just over one-third of that constituency in 2000 but
wants to expand his support in the community to better his chances
for re-election in November.
The proposal would provide a way for illegal aliens who can
show they have employment to work legally, although temporarily, in
the United States. The new "temporary worker program," which also
would include people still in their native countries who have a job
lined up in the United States, would not, like the temporary visa
programs already in existence that involve mostly technical
experts, apply only to a certain sector of the economy or industry.
Much of the detail of president's proposal was to be worked out
by Congress in future negotiations with the White House.
For instance, Bush wants to increase the nation's yearly
allotment of green cards that allow for permanent U.S. residency,
but won't say by how much, officials said. Around 1 million
green cards a year are issued now, though just 140,000 of them are
employment-based.
He also wants the workers' first three-year term in the program
to be renewable but won't say for how long; he won't set the amount
workers should pay to apply for the program; and he won't specify
how to enforce the requirement that no American worker wants the
job the foreign worker is taking, according to administration
officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Perhaps the biggest unresolved question is how the plan will
allow illegal aliens access, which they do not now have, to applying for green cards, or permanent U.S. residency.
Alienating Non-aliens
Sensitive to the opposition of many conservatives in Bush's own
party to any reward for those who broke the law when they entered
the United States, the administration said it is not proposing
blanket amnesty for illegals and the program is not linked to
green cards.
But the White House also said that workers accepted into the
temporary program could immediately, with an employer's
sponsorship, begin applying for a green card. Although these
workers would get no advantage over other applicants, an illegal
alien who attempted to apply now would simply be deported.
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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