The House passed two major immigration bills Thursday, the American Dream and Promise Act and the Farm Workforce Modernization Act. But it’s still going to be hard to escape the permanent stasis we’ve been stuck in since President Ronald Reagan’s big immigration overhaul in the late 1980s.
It amazes me that the framework of the immigration debate has been almost exactly the same for the just over 30 years I’ve been alive. At this point, it’s tired and stale, and I’m ready for us — the media, politicians, Americans all — to change how we talk about immigration.
On one side, you have activists and advocates who point to the lack of a path to citizenship for low-wage workers who’ve been in the United States for years, an immigration court system that’s straining at the seams and a refusal to deal with the root causes of immigration from Central America and Mexico.
On the other side, you have people who would convince their listeners that the border is porous, that the U.S. is full up and can’t accept any more newcomers and that the only solution is a constant and ever-increasing militarization of the border. This latter group is very loud, and it has only been growing, especially in Congress, over the last decade.
As a result, any shift to highlight and center the humanity of people seeking opportunity in the U.S. has been met with a chest-thumping promise to harden the border and increase border security. It’s what we saw when the last comprehensive reform had a chance of passing in 2013. For all the mean things I’ve written about the Senate, a bipartisan immigration bill made it out of there with votes to spare — only to die because of House Republicans’ obstruction.
That bill was pitch-perfect between the two camps, according to a New York Times summary, providing “a 13-year path to citizenship for the 11 million unauthorized immigrants in the country, as well as tough border security provisions that must be in place before the immigrants can gain legal status.” Among the provisions that won over GOP senators was the addition of “$40 billion over the next decade to border enforcement measures, including adding 20,000 Border Patrol agents and 700 miles of fencing along the southern border.” But that wasn’t good enough for the House GOP, which refused to even take up the bill.
Fast-forward to today. We’ve lived through the Trump administration’s successful efforts to tangle up, divert and otherwise mitigate immigration of both the legal and unauthorized sorts, weaponizing what had already been a broken system. Now one side appears to have shaken off the cobwebs to at least consider a new way forward.
He doesn’t want to talk about legal immigration or the people who are already here — he wants the fear.
Imagine my relief when looking through the immigration reform bills Democrats have introduced found nothing in the way of expanded power for the Border Patrol or Customs and Border Protection. There’s nothing about hiring more people to arrest or detain people; instead, the bills call for training more Border Patrol officials to provide crossers with medical care. And its main provision focuses on providing an eight-year path to citizenship for people who arrived before Jan. 1.
On the Republican side of the aisle, things haven’t changed. At all. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., took a trip to the border to take a swing at the Biden administration for relaxing former President Donald Trump’s immigration policies.
Wildly, he claimed that border agents told him that they’d captured people with ties to “Yemen, Iran, Sri Lanka, that’s what’s coming across. They even talked about Chinese, as well.” (The Trump State Department said as recently as 2019 that there was no evidence that any terrorist group had tried to send operatives across the border.)








