New York  Times

Fix Immigration. It’s What Voters Want.
 
By TOM COTTONDEC. 28, 2016 
 
_Continue  reading the main story_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/28/opinion/tom-cotton-fix-immigration-its-what-voters-want.html?ref=opinion&_r=1#stor
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Donald J. Trump smashed many orthodoxies on his way to  victory, but 
immigration was the defining issue separating him from his primary  opponents 
and 
Hillary Clinton. President-elect Trump now has a clear mandate not  only to 
stop illegal immigration, but also to finally cut the generation-long  
influx of low-skilled immigrants that undermines American workers. 
Yet many powerful industries benefit from such  immigration. They’re 
arguing that immigration controls are creating a  low-skilled labor shortage. 
“We’re pretty much begging for workers,” Tom Nassif, the  chief executive 
of Western Growers, a trade organization that represents  farmers, _said  on 
CNN_ (http://money.cnn.com/2016/09/29/news/economy/american-farm-workers/) 
. A fast-food chain founder _warned_ 
(http://www.wsj.com/articles/small-businesses-lament-there-are-too-few-mexicans-in-u-s-not-too-many-1480005020)
 ,  “
Our industry can’t survive without Mexican workers.” 
These same industries contend that stricter immigration  enforcement will 
further shrink the pool of workers and raise their wages. They  argue that 
closing our borders to inexpensive foreign labor will force employers  to add 
benefits and improve workplace conditions to attract and keep workers  
already here._Continue  reading the main story_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/28/opinion/tom-cotton-fix-immigration-its-what-voters-want.html?ref=opinion&_r
=1#story-continues-1) 

 
 
 
I have an answer to these charges:  Exactly. 
Higher wages, better benefits and more security for  American workers are 
features, not bugs, of sound immigration reform. For too  long, our 
immigration policy has skewed toward the interests of the wealthy and  
powerful: 
Employers get cheaper labor, and professionals get cheaper personal  services 
like housekeeping. We now need an immigration policy that focuses less  on the 
most powerful and more on everyone else.Photo  
 


It’s been a quarter-century since Congress substantially  reformed the 
immigration system. In that time, the population of people who are  in this 
country illegally has nearly tripled, to more than 11 million. We’ve  also 
accepted one million legal immigrants annually — and a vast majority are  
unskilled or low-skilled. 
Some people contend that low-skilled immigration doesn’t  depress wages. In 
his final State of the Union address, President Obama _argued  that_ 
(https://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/13/us/politics/obama-2016-sotu-transcript.html)
 
immigrants aren’t the “principal reason wages haven’t gone up; those  
decisions are made in the boardrooms that too often put quarterly earnings over 
 
long-term returns.” Yet those decisions are possible only in the context of a 
 labor surplus caused by low-skilled immigration. In a tight labor market, 
bosses  cannot set low wages and still attract workers. 
After all, the law of supply and  demand is not magically suspended in the 
labor market. As immigrant labor has  flooded the country, working-class 
wages have collapsed. Wages for Americans  with only high school diplomas have 
declined by 2 percent since the late 1970s,  and for those who didn’t finish 
high school, they have declined by nearly 20  percent, according to 
Economic Policy Institute figures. 
No doubt automation and globalization have also affected  wages, but mass 
immigration accelerates these trends with surplus labor, which  of course 
decreases wages. Little wonder, then, that these Americans voted for  the 
candidate who promised higher wages and less immigration instead of all the  
candidates — Republicans and Democrats alike — who promised essentially more of 
 the same on immigration. 
America has always offered a basic deal: If you’re willing  to work hard 
and play by the rules, you can make a better life for yourself and  your kids. 
But without good wages, this deal seems impossible, which is one  reason so 
many Americans think their children will be worse off than they are.  These 
Americans see cheap immigrant labor as a way to enrich the wealthy while  
creating a near permanent underclass for whom the American dream is always 
just  out of reach. 
Yet, as if Mr. Trump’s campaign never happened, companies  in 
labor-intensive industries want to sustain or even increase current  
immigration flows. It
’s not hard to understand why. Cheap labor helps the bottom  line. It is 
hard to understand why so many politicians would go along. The  short-term 
interest of businesses isn’t the same as the long-term national  interest. 
Our country, like any country, needs borders and must  decide who and how 
many can cross those borders. We must make this decision with  the well-being 
of all our citizens in mind. Today, that means a large reduction  in legal 
immigration and a reorientation toward ultra-high-skill immigrants. 
This policy would resemble the immigration systems of  Canada and 
Australia, countries with similar advanced economies. While our  system gives 
priority to reuniting extended families and low-skilled labor,  their systems 
prize 
nuclear-family reunification and attributes like language  skills, 
education and work experience. A similar system here would allow in  immigrants 
like 
doctors to work in rural areas while not pushing down  working-class wages. 
In some quarters, proposals like these invoke cries of  “nativism” and “
xenophobia.” But recent immigrants are the very Americans who  have to compete 
with new immigrants for jobs. Far from being anti-immigrant,  this proposal 
would give recent arrivals a better shot at higher wages, stable  work and 
assimilation.615COMMENTS  
We have an immigration policy today that few Americans  support or voted 
for. It’s allowed legal and illegal immigration at levels  divorced from what 
our economy needs. That has undermined the earning power of  those Americans 
least able to afford it. 
But in this election, Americans finally  demanded an end to this unthinking 
immigration system. President-elect Trump and  Congress should take that 
mandate and act on it promptly in the new  year.

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