UPDATED–2:40 p.m. EST
Comprehensive immigration reform is a “top priority for America’s unions,” said AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka in a Thursday conference. AFL-CIO, America’s largest labor federation, is launching a nationwide campaign for what they hope will be a lasting revamp of American immigration policy.
“We’ve built a mobilization structure, and we’ll be out in force like we do for presidential elections or health care reform with one message: Immigration reform now,” said Trumka.
Policy specifics remain elusive, but Trumka did hint at the general shape he believes immigration reform should take. In particular, he emphasized a “realistic road map to citizenship” for undocumented immigrants residing in the United States and a “data-driven” approach to correct labor shortages in various regions and industries. E-Verify, said Trumka, is “part of the system we’ve proposed.” In 2011, AFL-CIO had said they opposed E-Verify “in its current form,” but would reconsider if the program were to change.
Speaking to msnbc, AFL-CIO legislative representative Andi DiBitetto elaborated on Trumka’s statement that E-Verify is part of the organization’s immigration package. “Within the AFL-CIO framework, we call for a secure and effective worker authorization system,” she said. “Our framework doesn’t call for E-Verify by name; it’s a program similar to it in principle.”
Though DiBitetto said that Congress would have to come up with a more specific proposal, AFL-CIO believes any worker authorization program would need to be more accurate than E-Verify in its current form and ensure “strong privacy protections, that it doesn’t encourage discrimination, and strong due process authorizations.”
Trumka used the expression “data-driven” several times throughout the call Thursday, as he emphasized that a “data-driven system” for analyzing work flows “has the flexibility to meet the needs of everyone concerned,” including employers. He said such a policy would be superior to guest worker programs which allocate employer-based visas, tying immigrants to their employers and thereby forming “a second class of workers unable to exercise even the most fundamental rights.”
Trumka also said that AFL-CIO was in “good faith” discussions with the Chamber of Commerce, a frequent opponent of organized labor. He declined to discuss the details of those discussions, particularly any points of policy disagreement. “On those issues where we agree, we’ve been trying to work for the best of the country,” he said.









