AFL-CIO President Urges Immigration Reform to Stimulate Economy

June 18, 2010
AFL-CIO President Urges Immigration Reform to Stimulate Economy
Today AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka gave a major speech on
immigration reform in Cleveland. It's important for the leader of
working people to speak directly about comprehensive immigration
reform as a key element in fixing our broken economy.  It's also
notable because he is giving this speech in the Rust Belt--a region of
the U.S. that has seen economic devastation and that often scape-goats
immigrants for their economic woes.  He gave a similar speech during
the elections and was able to move many union members to see beyond
racial prejudice in order to better the lives of working people by
voting for Barak Obama.  Hopefully, this important speech will have a
similar effect by bringing union members to have a more comprehensive,
progressive perspective on immigration reform and the global economy.


Remarks by Richard Trumka
President, AFL-CIO
City Club of Cleveland
Cleveland, Ohio
June 18, 2010

Thank you, President Roller [City Club Board President Jan Roller].
Good afternoon.  I am delighted to be here with you in the great city
of Cleveland.  I want to talk to you about the grave economic
challenges we face today - and the labor movement’s vision for where
we need to go.

There is no better place to have a discussion about our economic
challenges than Cleveland-where business and labor built the American
middle class.  Cleveland embodies both the consequences of our failed
economic policies of the last three decades - and our hope for a
different future.
The economic crisis has hit hard here-116,000 lost jobs in the last
decade in Cuyahoga County.  Eighty-six thousand home foreclosures last
year alone.  A self-defeating attempt to address budget shortfalls by
attacking school budgets and teachers.

But we can also see a glimpse of a better future in the Lake Erie wind
turbine project-with turbines built here in Ohio, in the OneCommunity
Project fiber optic network, and in Cleveland’s role as a global
center of fuel cell development.

We’re at a turning point today.  The economic course our nation
started on in 1980-the effort to have a low-wage, high-consumption
society that imports more and more of what it consumes-has hit the
wall.  We cannot afford to stay this course- of letting the private
sector and the financial markets run amok, of outsourcing everything
that’s not nailed to the floor, and of pushing down workers every
chance we get.  And last night's vote by Republicans in the United
States Senate to block a simple extension of unemployment benefits for
the most hard-pressed people without jobs is just the latest shame.
At some point, there is nobody left to buy the junk that we import
from everywhere but here.

We now face a future of prolonged high unemployment and stagnant or
falling wages-unless we do something different.

Today I am going to talk about doing something different.

We need a new national economic strategy for a global economy.

At the heart of our strategy must be a workforce with world class
skills and world class rights and trade policies that serve the
interests of the American people.  But today I also want to talk to
you about what may seem like a strange subject--immigration--because
it is patently clear that we cannot talk about our national workforce
strategy unless we face head-on our own contradictions, hypocrisy and
history on immigration.
The truth is that in a dynamic global economy in the 21st century, we
simply cannot afford to have millions of hard-working people without
legal protections, without meaningful access to higher education, shut
off from the high-wage, high-productivity economy.  It is just too
costly to waste all that talent and strength and drive.

But immigration reform is not just an economic issue.  The way we as a
nation treat the immigrants among us is about more than economic
strategy-it is about who we are as a nation.

I grew up in a small town in Southwestern Pennsylvania, not that far
from here.  The immigrant path led from the coalmines to Pittsburgh to
Cleveland.

And if you look around Cleveland at the ethnic clubs and the churches,
you see a city that immigrants built--Hungarians and Poles, Irish and
Italians, Serbs and Croats and Jews, as well as African Americans.
Cleveland is a city where the traditions of the places we came from
are the very foundation of our community.
It was not easy when my family came to this country.  My parents fled
poverty and war from different corners of Europe.  When I was a kid,
there was an ugly name for every one of us in all twelve languages
spoken in Nemacolin, PA-wop and hunkie and polack and kike.  We were
the last hired and first fired, the people who did the hardest and
most dangerous work, the people whose pay got shorted because we
didn’t know the language and were afraid to complain.

We got to the mines and the mills, and the people already there said
we were taking their jobs, ruining their country.  Yet in the end the
immigrants of my parents’ and grandparents’ generation prevailed, and
built America.  This is the history of my family, and this is the
story of Cleveland and Pittsburgh and Detroit and Chicago and
Baltimore and a thousand cities and towns across America.

And yet today I hear from working people who should know better, some
in my own family - that those immigrants are taking our jobs, ruining
our country.  Haven’t we been here before?

When I hear that kind of talk, I want to say, did an immigrant move
your plant overseas?  Did an immigrant take away your pension?  Or cut
your health care?  Did an immigrant destroy American workers’ right to
organize?  Or crash the financial system? Did immigrant workers write
the trade laws that have done so much harm to Ohio?

My friends, we are most of us the children of immigrants.

But there was no labor movement in America until workers learned to
look at each other and see not immigrants and native born, not white
and black, not different last names, but our common fate as workers.
The labor movement  believes that our goal as a nation should be a
future of shared prosperity - not stubborn unemployment and a lost
generation.  That our economic strategy must bring us together instead
of driving us apart.  Our strategy must help us be the kind of country
we want our children to thrive in-the country our history tells us we
can be.  The home of the American Dream.

So exactly what is the American Dream?  Some will tell you the
American Dream is the idea that in America anyone can become rich.
And the fact that the upper reaches of our society are relatively open
is a good thing about our country-but it is not the American Dream.

The American Dream is not that a few of us will get to be rich, but
that all of us will have a fair portion of the good things in life.
Time to be with our families.  The chance for our children to get an
education and the opportunity to make their own way in the world.
Laws that protect us, not oppress us.

The American labor movement is all about the pursuit and the defense
of this idea of America.  And we have learned through our history that
it is only when working people stand together-in the workplace and at
the polling place-that the American Dream is secure.

Recently, the American Dream brought a man my age named Elvino and his
son Ramon to America from Mexico.  They are experienced bricklayers
and were hired to work on a large mixed-use housing development-a
public project.  They and thirty others worked for five weeks, and the
contractor just never paid them.

For too many immigrants seeking the American Dream, this is the
American reality.  Hard work rewarded with ripoffs.  And then no way
to seek justice.  That’s why I am so proud to be able to say that
Elvino, Ramon and their co-workers are taking this injustice to the
U.S. Department of Labor, thanks to the efforts of Bricklayers Union
Local 18 in Cincinnati and the Interfaith Worker Rights Center-whose
members understand that truly an injury to one is an injury to all.

Immigration to the United States is part of a larger picture-the
picture of how we are getting globalization wrong.  There is no better
way to understand that than to look at what has happened between the
United States and Mexico since NAFTA was implemented in 1994.

NAFTA was sold to the American public on the idea that increasing
trade with Mexico would create good jobs in both countries and slow
the flow of undocumented workers coming to the U.S. from Mexico.
Instead, inequality has grown and workers’ rights have eroded in both
the U.S. and Mexico since NAFTA’s passage.  And illegal immigration
flows have tripled.

Today we treat our relationship with Mexico as if it were a national
security problem-solvable with military aid and a militarized border.
And that is a dangerous mistake.  The failures of our relationship
with Mexico represent a failed economic strategy.  They cannot be
solved with guns and soldiers and fences.  They must be addressed
through an economic strategy for shared prosperity based on rising
wages in both countries.
Instead, at the heart of the failure of our immigration policy is an
unpleasant fact, one that you almost never hear talked about openly:
Too many U.S. employers actually like the current state of the
immigration system-a system where immigrants are both plentiful and
undocumented-afraid and available.  Too many employers like a system
where our borders are closed and open at the same time-closed enough
to turn immigrants into second-class citizens, open enough to ensure
an endless supply of socially and legally powerless cheap labor.

Our immigration system makes a mockery of the American dream.  The
people doing the hardest work for the least money have no legal
protections, no ability to send their children to college, no real
right to form a union, no economic or legal security-no way to turn
their contributions-their years of hard work-into the most fundamental
right of all, the right to vote.  That is intolerable for a democracy.

Recently, I met a young woman named Fabiola, who came to the United
States when she was two years old.  Her parents have worked in the
United States for twenty-two years.  Fifteen years ago, her father
became a U.S. citizen, so all her younger siblings who were born here
also are citizens. But Fabiola fell through the legal cracks and is
now too old to become a citizen under current immigration law.

But that has not stopped her from working hard to live the American
Dream. Recently, she graduated from the University of California  with
a degree in international development. But she cannot find a job in
her field because she is undocumented.

How does Fabiola’s story make any sense in economic or human terms?
Her talents and her education are being squandered because our
immigration system is simply not working.

That is why the AFL-CIO is fighting to fix this broken immigration
system as a crucial element of our broader economic strategy.  Because
we stand for the American Dream for all who work in our country.
Because we are for ending our two-tiered workforce and our two-tiered
society.  And because an underclass of disenfranchised workers ends up
hurting all workers.

But we are not for any kind of immigration reform.  We will not
support the return to outdated guest worker programs that give
immigrants no security, no future here in the United States, no rights
and no hope of being part of the American Dream.

Immigration reform must begin with the principle that workers in the
United States deserve to enjoy a fair share of the wealth we
create-that wages should move up with productivity.  The labor
movement and a broad coalition of faith-based and immigrants’ rights
groups have worked with former Secretary of Labor Ray Marshall to put
together such a program for comprehensive immigration reform.

The AFL-CIO is for a fair path toward legalization for all
undocumented workers who are working to realize the American Dream.
We are for the DREAM Act, that gives young people like Fabiola a
future in the only country they know.

We need an independent commission to determine our society’s genuine
need for more immigrants, and then we need to build a pathway that
allows immigrants to be securely part of our country from day one-able
to assert their legal rights, including the right to organize, without
fear of retaliation.

And together with this commission, going forward we are for
establishing real penalties for employers who break the law.  We must
focus enforcement not on those who come here seeking the American
Dream, but on those who would exploit them.

This is the reform the labor movement is fighting for.

But instead, we see today a dangerous drift toward a politics of hate.
 Last month, I went to Arizona to stand with working people who were
the target of a hate campaign-a campaign for racial profiling waged by
the state legislature and signed into law by the governor.  A campaign
to make anyone who might look like an immigrant live in fear of the
police.  All of us should fear such a system:  In the end, don’t all
of us who aren’t Native Americans look like the immigrants and
children of immigrants that we are?

As President of the AFL-CIO, my message to working people is that we
all are bound together by our lives as workers, our dreams for our
families, and our hopes for this country’s future.  The labor movement
stands for giving all workers in America the right to dream the
American Dream.

Unfortunately, the American Dream is slipping away.

Today, as in any economic crisis, there are people who offer hatred
and divisiveness as the solution to the crisis.  If our political
leaders do not lead, if they do not offer help in the present and a
clear strategy for prosperity in the future-starting with good
jobs-those voices of hate will grow, they will become more powerful,
and they will feed on the public’s anger and pain and desperation.

President Obama has laid out in broad terms the approach we need to
take.  He has spoken out for creating good jobs, rebuilding
manufacturing, taking on the challenge of climate change and energy
independence, growing exports and investing in our infrastructure,
including our education infrastructure.

If we are truly going to build a world class workforce, we need to
restore workers’ fundamental human right to organize and bargain with
their employers.  And we need to make sure every worker in America -
documented or undocumented - is protected by our labor laws. That is
why it is so urgent that we reform our immigration system.

The President’s strategy also requires that we invest in rebuilding
our country.  Consider this fact-as a result of the economic recovery
act, we are now in the process of planning approximately 500 miles of
high-speed rail, including lines here in Ohio.  Sounds good, until you
realize that China, a country about the same size as the United
States, is in the process of constructing 5,000 miles of high-speed
rail.

Restoring workers’ rights and building workers’ skills.  Creating the
infrastructure of the 21st century.  Thinking strategically when it
comes to trade policy.  These are the strategies for making the
American Dream as real for our children as it was for my parents.

But that will not be enough.  We as a nation must be true to our
better selves-employers must not make a buck on the backs of workers
who live in fear of deportation, and workers must stand together in
the workplace for good jobs, safe jobs, health care for all, and
retirement security we can count on.  And so when we talk about making
the American Dream real, the labor movement stands for making it real
for all of us who do the work of our country.  All of us-no matter
what we look like, who we choose to love, or where we come from.
Surely there we can find common ground.
bh
June 18, 2010 | Permalink

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