Earlier this year, advocates of the Senate's ill-fated
immigration reform offered a quid pro quo: Grant amnesty and
trillions in government benefits to some 12 million illegal aliens,
and we'll agree -- finally -- to beef up security at the border,
close loopholes that encourage employers to hire known illegals,
and require criminal aliens to leave the country.
Backed by a torrent of support from millions of angry
constituents, conservative senators led by Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.),
Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), and John Cornyn (R-Texas) wisely rejected this
deal. After all, they reasoned, the proposed amnesty and its costs
would be the only sure thing in this lopsided bargain. Bestowing
citizenship is irrevocable. Once a citizen, forever a
citizen.
But the enforcement provisions, they understood, would be subject
to endless assaults. Liberal lawmakers would devise loopholes or
simply cut funding. The ACLU and immigrant advocacy groups would
file dilatory lawsuits. Businesses accustomed to hiring illegals
would seek to soften these provisions. Sympathizers in the media
would join the chorus, accusing pro-enforcement conservatives of
racism and other ghastly crimes.
To his credit, President Bush learned one important lesson from
the failure of the Senate immigration bill. A government that
couldn't deliver on its repeated promises to secure the border and
enforce existing immigration laws shouldn't be trusted with the
daunting responsibilities envisioned in the comprehensive Senate
bill. Even Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the failed bill's leading
advocate, eventually acknowledged that: "The comprehensive approach
to immigration failed because the American people do not ... trust
... the government. We said we would secure the borders, but
Americans didn't believe us."
So on Aug. 10, the Bush administration unveiled an ambitious and
creative package of 26 initiatives using existing legal tools to
secure the border, remove fugitive aliens from the U.S., and
increase cooperation with state and local law-enforcement
officials.
By far the most controversial of these proposals concerns
so-called "no-match" letters -- letters the Social Security
Administration routinely sends to notify employers of discrepancies
between an employee's name and social security number. Homeland
security officials estimate that 90% of these discrepancies are
attributable to illegal workers using contrived social security
numbers or engaging in identity theft by misappropriating existing
ones.
Under federal law, it's unlawful for employers "to hire ... an
alien knowing the alien is ... unauthorized" or "to continue to
employ an alien ... knowing the alien is (or has become) ...
unauthorized ... with respect to such employment." But, with a nod
and wink, immigration officials allow employers to sidestep this
requirement by requiring them to accept virtually any identity
document, so long as it "appears to be genuine."
Now the feds are finally clamping down. They want to send letters
to 140,000 employers with large numbers of "no-match" employees
reminding them of their responsibility to correct these
discrepancies and that they could face criminal penalties or fines
as high as $10,000 per illegal worker if they do not do so within
90 days.
On cue, lawyers for the ACLU and AFL-CIO sued. Unfortunately, they
convinced Maxine Chesney, a liberal federal judge in San Francisco,
to issue an order that prevents officials from mailing the letters
pending further legal proceedings. Enforcing this federal law, the
ACLU alleges, would jeopardize the jobs of legal employees,
increase off-the-books employment, disrupt the workplace, lead to
job losses, and even increase consumer prices. They forgot to
mention global warming.
Employer groups immediately chimed in. The International Franchise
Association predicted this new get-tough policy would lead to
"turmoil in the nation's workforce." A top official of the Western
Growers Association, which represents firms that produce 90% of the
fresh fruits, vegetables and nuts grown in California, not only
acknowledged that these companies break the law but argued they
should be above it, too. "We know and have told the government," he
said, "that much of agriculture's workforce is falsely documented"
and "illegal." Rather than comply with existing law, these
employers "have the right to expect the U.S. Congress to ...
resolve these vital issues."
Meanwhile, our immigration system is still broke. The prospects
for Congress re-entering the treacherous waters of immigration
reform, moreover, are nil unless we rediscover the principle of
"rule of law." Under it, the only legitimate exercise of government
authority comes when it is in accordance with written law and
established procedure. It is our ultimate safeguard against
arbitrary governance and ensures that we live under, as John Adams
wrote, "a government of laws and not of men."
Our courts, lawmakers, employers and advocacy groups forget this
at their peril.
Michael G. Franc is vice president of government relations for The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events