Sunday, February 9, 2025

photos from the edge 09 - fort bragg families march against raids

photos from the edge 09
FORT BRAGG FAMILIES MARCH TO PROTEST TRUMP DEPORTATION THREATS
Photographs by David Bacon

For a full selection of photographs, click here:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/56646659@N05/albums/72177720323721022/

Young people and their families in Fort Bragg CA joined thousands of others who went into the streets this past week, protesting the effort by the Trump administration to terrorize them with the threat of immigration raids and deportations.  

Fort Bragg is a former lumber mill town on the California coast a few hours north of San Francisco.  When the mill finally closed in 2002, it was long after the time when the lumber industry employed thousands in California forests and mills.  

Mexicans began coming to Fort Bragg, many from the Yucatan, to work in the seafood plants in the Noyo River harbor.  For a few years, the demand in Japan for sea urchins, or uni, provided lots of work.  But the shellfish were rapidly exhausted, and Mexican workers moved into jobs in the tourism industry or picking wine grapes in nearby vinyards, which replaced both the mill and the sea urchins as Fort Bragg's economic lifeline.

Today small Mexican markets and restaurants are part of many town neighborhoods.  The community is growing, and students from immigrant families make up a majority in the city's schools.  But being part of Fort Bragg has not been easy.  The first immigration raid took place in 1988.  When Trump threatened new raids and mass deportations, young people knew what he was intending from their own family histories.

It is a testimony to the courage of these young people of Fort Bragg and their families that fear of deportation did not paralyze them, or make them cower behind closed doors in fear.  And as they took to the streets,  passing cars honked and waved their support of the message carried by the handmade signs and flags.















Wednesday, January 29, 2025

TRUMP'S EXECUTIVE ORDERS - THE RETURN OF COLD WAR REPRESSION

TRUMP'S EXECUTIVE ORDERS - THE RETURN OF COLD WAR REPRESSION
By David Bacon
Jacobin, 1/29/25
https://jacobin.com/2025/01/trump-immigration-cold-war-repression

 

RICHMOND, CA - Civil rights icon Rev. Phil Lawson speaks against deportations as oeople of faith hold a vigil outside the Richmond Detention Center, where immigrants were incarcerated before being deported, not long after the first election of Donald Trump as U.S. President.  Seven years of vigils and demonstrations finally forced Contra Costa County to cancel its contract with ICE and the Center was closed.  Lawson passed on January 28 at 92.  Phil Lawson, Presente!


In 1950, Nevada Democratic Senator Pat McCarran said he wanted to save the United States from communism and "Jewish interests."  His solution was passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, known as the McCarran Walter Act (MWA), and its complement, the Internal Security Act of 1950 (also known, confusingly, as the McCarran Act).

Both laws defined much of the legal framework for Cold War repression.  They created an era of political trials and deportations, designed to terrorize progressive political leaders, enmesh them in endless legal battles, and where possible imprison and deport them.  At the same time, mass deportations, like those of the early 1930s, grew exponentially, while contract labor schemes, once prohibited by Federal law, filled the country's fields with braceros.

A week into the executive orders issued by the Trump administration, a similar set of McCarran-like measures are reviving this Cold War strategy.  Anti-immigrant hysteria and repression have seemingly been a permanent part of U.S. public life, and the past election demonstrated clearly its prevalence in both political parties.  But once in office, the Trump administration is acting on what many hoped were empty threats.  Its blueprint for a new assault on migrants and political rights is not just a rightwing continuation of business as usual, but an effort that takes its cues from one of the worst periods in U.S. political history - the Cold War.  Chief among the legal structures that defined that era were these two laws.

The McCarran immigration measures were planned to ""preserve the sociological and cultural balance of the United States," in the words of the McCarren Report that laid the basis for the McCarran Walter Act.  The means to accomplish this included waves of deportations, making naturalization harder to achieve, and screening out "subversives" among people wanting to come.  Although legal protections against deportation at the time were few and largely unenforced, the MWA ended almost all of them, leading Senator Hubert Humphrey to say that deportation with no due process "would be the beginning of a police state."  

Many of Trump's executive orders mirror that intent.  One expands the use of "expedited removal," which denies court hearings in deportation cases unless a person can prove they've been here for more than 2 years.  Another Trump order revives the Alien Registration Act of 1940-44, but takes it much further, by making it a felony for any non-citizen to fail to register.  Undocumented people would not be able to register without being immediately held for deportation, but failing to register would also be a crime.  According to the American Immigration Council, "by invoking the registration provision, the Trump administration is threatening to turn all immigrants into criminals by setting them up for the 'crime' of failing to register."

In the immigration raids that followed the passage of the McCarran Walter Act, agents rounded up people at work, on the street and seemingly everywhere.  In 1954 over a million people were picked up in the notorious "Operation Wetback."   Trump's border czar Tom Homan, who headed the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency in the last Trump administration, announced at his new appointment that mass immigration raids will begin again.  They will now include schools and churches, while earlier priorities directing enforcement to concentrate on "criminals" rather than families have been ended.

Rhetoric that immigrants were threats to the social order was prevalent in the Cold War, and is a constant refrain in today's political discourse.  The MWA barred entry of people guilty of "moral turpitude," which included homosexuality and even drinking too much.  A political bar (only overturned in 1990) prevented accused Communists from entering the U.S., and was applied with special ferocity to poets - from South African poet Dennis Brutus to Chilean poet Pablo Neruda to Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish.  Gabriel Garcia Marquez, whose novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude, is now a hit on Netflix, was banned from the U.S. as a Communist after he received the Nobel Prize.

Non-citizen Communists, anarchists and other accused "subversives" in the U.S. became deportable, even people guilty of teaching, writing or publishing in support of "subversive" ideas.  In 1952 the Supreme Court upheld the deportation of Robert Galvan, who'd been brought as a 7-year old from Mexico in 1918, married a U.S. citizen, had four children and worked at the Van Camp Seafood plant in San Diego.  During World War 2, when the U.S. was an ally of the Soviet Union, he'd belonged to the Communist Party for two years, then a legal political party.  He was nevertheless deported under the MWA's ban.

Part of that ban has never ended - being a Communist Party member is still grounds for denying a citizenship application.  Repeating this history and using similar language, Trump executive orders allow certain organizations to be declared "foreign terrorist organizations," opening the door to prosecution of any organization with radical politics and relationships with an organization outside the U.S.

Much of McCarran's Internal Security Act was eventually declared unconstitutional or repealed, but this took years in some cases.  Meanwhile it was enforced with a vengeance.  It required "Communist organizations" to register, set up the Subversive Activities Control Board, and authorized the construction of concentration camps, like those used against Japanese-Americans during WW2.  The FBI made lists of people to be detained in them.  Even picketing a Federal courthouse became a felony.  When Trump called out Federal troops to prevent Portland's BLM protesters from demonstrating in front of the Federal building there, during his first administration, it was the same prohibition.

Using the national security pretext, the U.S. barred the entry of over 100,000 people in 1950.  The Trump orders focus in the same way on finding rationales for denying entry.  The Biden administration, in its last year, had already made policy changes that stopped people from simply arriving at the border, crossing it and asking for asylum.  In his first week Trump closed off entirely the ability of people to apply from the Mexican side as well, shut down the app that set up appointments for applicants, and stopped processing asylum applications.  Pursuant to another order, from now on anyone applying for any type of visa from anywhere must support U.S. "ideological values," again setting the basis for political exclusion.

The purpose stated by the McCarren Report, to "preserve the sociological and cultural balance of the United States," was implemented in the McCarran Walter Act's immigration quotas.  During World War 2 the U.S. had to drop its blanket prohibition on Asian immigration, the heritage of the Chinese Exclusion Act and the Immigration Act of 1924 (nicknamed the Japanese Exclusion Act).  Quotas were then set in 1952, country by country, to accomplish much the same end.  China, India, and each Asian country had a quota of 100 people per year.  Germany, which had just been defeated in the war, had a quota of 25,814, and Great Britain had the biggest, 65,361.  Quotas for European countries were so large that they were rarely filled.

The quotas have their modern echo in Trump's executive orders.  In his first administration he stopped the entry of people from seven Islamic countries, in the "Muslim ban."  Huge crowds of protestors shut down airports across the country to free migrants caught by the government's action.  The Supreme Court, however, upheld the government's ability to implement a modified ban.  A new Trump executive order again enables the President to bar entry to people from specific countries.

The virtual ban-by-quota of people from China was part of the anti-Chinese hysteria fomented after the victory of the Chinese Revolution in 1949.  Again, political repression was linked to immigration enforcement.  As mass deportations spread against Mexicans in the Southwest, agents of the Immigration and Naturalization Service fanned out through Chinatowns during the 1950s.  They accused families of falsifying the documents of "paper sons" and "paper daughters" many years earlier, and then revoked their residence visas.  

Maurice Chuck, a progressive activist in San Francisco's Chinatown, was sent to Federal prison.  Politically motivated deportation proceedings targeted other leftwing activists, from Harry Bridges to Ernesto Mangaoang to Claudia Jones and many others.  Some won their appeals at the Supreme Court, while others were expelled from the country.  Today, when the Trump administration threatens to classify organizations as "foreign terrorists", to invoke the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, and to revoke the tax exempt status of non-profit solidarity groups, its actions are direct descendants of this earlier Cold War repression.

The McCarran Walter Act and the Internal Security Act were two legal battering rams used to produce fear and paralysis among immigrant communities and their allies in progressive organizations.  Their alliance had helped organize unions in the 1930s and 40s, and defended communities under attack.  The Zoot Suit movie dramatizes the work of the Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born, founded by the Communist Party, in fighting the police frame-up of Mexican youth in Los Angeles in the Sleepy Lagoon case.  Leftwing Mexican organizations fought earlier deportation waves as well - the Congreso del Pueblo de Habla Española and the Asociacion Nacional Mexicano Americano.  Min Qing, the Chinese American Democratic Youth League, spread radical ideas, promoted progressive community politics, and defended immigrant families.  All were attacked by the anti-communist juggernaut.

The history of the 1950s is also a history of deportation cases fiercely fought.  The alliances people were able to preserve became seeds of the civil rights movement that grew as the McCarthyite era sputtered to a close.  The Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born helped found the Civil Rights Congress, which protested lynching in the South, and sent a petition calling it out to the United Nations, "We Charge Genocide."  Today's Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance, founded by members of the legislature's Black Caucus to oppose the Bush immigration raids, walks in these footsteps.   

It is important for the social movements that face the Trump administration today to know this Cold War history.  It's not just that we've been here before, and need to learn what history can teach us.  Today's executive orders, and the hysteria they feed that goes beyond the MAGA base, have the same purpose.  Their intention is to frighten communities, people of faith and unions into paralysis, and to break alliances between immigrants and progressive movements that can help defend them.  But MAGA is not new.  As a growing civil rights movement spelled the end of the Cold War assault, the social movements of today among immigrants, unions, churches and legal activists, armed with self-knowledge and history, can stop this one too.

THE EVOLVING STRATEGY FOR DEFENDING IMMIGRANT WORKERS

THE EVOLVING STRATEGY FOR DEFENDING IMMIGRANT WORKERS
By David Bacon
Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, 1/21/25
https://rosalux.nyc/the-evolving-strategy-for-defending-immigrant-workers/


SAN FRANCISCO, CA - SEIU janitors from San Francisco and Los Angeles demonstrated in support of AB 450, the Immigrant Worker Protection Act, a law that protects workers during immigration raids and enforcement actions.


The current fight within the Republican Party makes it very clear, once again, that ensuring a labor supply to corporations is Trump's primary obligation.  I say once again because this is a repeat of what happened in 2017, when he met with corporate growers to assure them that his immigration enforcement wouldn't deprive them of workers in the field.  In fact, that is just what happened, with the expansion of the H-2A guestworker visa program, and no mass firings of farmworkers at critical times because of their undocumented status.  

Two months ago construction companies in Texas made media appeals, not for more border enforcement, but asking Trump not to use enforcement to deprive them of workers.  Now the tech industry is demanding workers too.  The supply of workers for the tech industry "simply does not exist in America in sufficient quantity" according to Tesla owner and billionaire Elon Musk.  Tech corporate titans, including Google's Sundar Pichai, Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon's Jeff Bezos all visited Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate during and after the campaign, making the same demand.  Just before New Years Trump responded, saying "I have many H-1B visas on my properties. I've been a believer in H-1B. I have used it many times. It's a great program."  In his hotels and golf courses he has also used another Federal guestworker visa program, H-2B, to supply gardeners and housekeepers.

Whether for tech titans or corporate growers, the key issue is supplying workers at a price they want to pay.  Agriculture and construction laborers are just two industries built on a workforce at close to minimum wage. The guestworker contract labor programs in these industries are structured to provide that labor at that wage.  Tech companies want to use its H-1B visa program to keep its software workforce at substandard wages as well.  They all expect Trump to meet their demands, and poured money into his campaign to make sure that happened.

For defenders of immigrant workers, this is a threatening moment.  Some immigrant workers, like the million-plus undocumented laborers in agriculture, will certainly feel the the brunt of Trump's threatened immigration enforcement.  The corporate need for labor will not, in the end, protect them.  If employers can get replacement workers at low wages, they have no loyalty to the workers they now have.  But it does give some leverage to undocumented workers to protest against raids, firings and other forms of enforcement, where employers remain dependent on them.  That can be a crucial protection. In addition, if unions and workers living here help the contract workers on H-2A, H-2B and H-1B visas to protest the abuse in these programs, that can be additional protection for all workers.  

The benefit of organized resistance goes beyond fighting raids and keeping jobs.  Organizations and coalitions that defend immigrant workers, their families, and their communities have historically been the pillars of movements for deeper social change. They've shown great persistence and strategic vision, as they fought back against threats of deportation. More than that, they have imagined a future of greater equality, working-class rights, and social solidarity, and have proposed ways to get there.  That vision, the capacity and willingness to fight for basic change, is as necessary to defeating repression as action in the streets.


Replacing migrant workers

Immigration enforcement does not exist on its own. It has a function in a larger system that serves capitalist economic interests by providing the labor force that employers need. Immigrant labor is more vital than ever to many industries. More than 50 percent of the entire agricultural workforce in the country is undocumented, and the list of other industries that rely on immigrant labor is long: meatpacking, some construction jobs, building cleaning, health care, restaurants and retail, hotels, and more.

Trump is not free to eliminate this workforce. This is potentially a source of power for workers. Employers know this, and within months of his inauguration in 2017, agribusiness executives were already meeting with him to ensure that threats of a closed border and raids would not be used when they needed labor. Last month, Texas construction companies warned Trump that mass deportations would threaten their profits. In 2006, some California farmers bused workers to big marches in the hope that the Sensenbrenner Act would not deprive them of workers.

But workers, communities, and unions can't rely on employers to fight Trump for them. What businesses need is labor at a price they're willing to pay. The current system has served them well. The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that about 8 million of the 11-12 million undocumented people in the United States are wage workers, and most work for or near the minimum wage. The abysmal federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour produces an annual income of $14,500. And higher minimums in states like California only produce an income of barely twice that amount. The median household income for farmworkers is less than $25,000. Yet Social Security estimates the median wage in the United States at $66,000.

That huge gap is a source of enormous profits. If industries that rely on immigrant labor paid the average wage, they would have to pay undocumented workers an additional $250 billion. The profits they make from low-paid labor are enormous. Trump needs to ensure not only that workers contribute labor, but that the cost is acceptable to corporate employers.

In his 2017 meetings with farmers, Trump promised to expand the contract labor system, in which up to a million people hired by employers work in the United States each year. These workers can only come to work, not stay. Visa categories include the notorious H-2A program for agricultural labor, like the old bracero program of the 1950s. Last year, farmers received 378,513 H-2A visa certifications, one-sixth of the entire U.S. agricultural workforce. The program is notorious for abusing workers, and recent reforms by Labor Secretary Julie Su are not going to survive. The H-2A program is huge, but others like it are growing in hospitality, the meat industry and other industries, even for teachers in schools.

Independent Senator Bernie Sanders, a democratic socialist, criticizes the H-1B visa program, whose primary user is the tech industry.  There its function, he says, "is not to hire 'the best and the brightest,' but rather to replace good-paying jobs with low-wage indentured servants from abroad. The cheaper the labor they hire, the more money the billionaires make."  While the number of new applications for those workers is capped at 66,000 per year, the limit is usually extended.  The visa lasts for 3 years, and can be renewed.  As a result, according to the US Customs and Immigration Service, in 2019 the number of H-1B workers in the country was 619,327.  Sanders noted that "the top 30 corporations using this program laid off at least 85,000 American workers while they hired over 34,000 new H-1B guest workers."

There is no way to recruit and deploy so many workers without displacing the existing workforce, which, in agriculture and meatpacking is largely made up of immigrants who already live here. For unions and worker advocates, this poses a dilemma, and the expansion of H-2A or H-1B will deepen it. How can they organize and defend existing workers, including their members, while also defending those who replace them? Yet H-2A farmworkers, for instance themselves are not simply passive victims. They have a history of protesting exploitation. To strike means being fired, losing one's visa and having to leave, and then being blacklisted from future recruitment. Yet despite the risks, these workers sometimes act when conditions become dire.

Unions like Familias Unidas por la Justicia in Washington state have helped contract workers when strikes break out. But growers keep workers isolated, making it difficult to organize. Meanwhile, FUJ and other unions protest displacement, because job loss in farmworker communities means hunger and evictions. In many farmworker localities, existing workers increasingly fear being replaced. Strikes to raise wages are risky and less frequent. At the Ostrom mushroom plant in Washington state, local workers, members of the United Farm Workers, have been on strike for two years against replacement by H-2A visa recruits.

By the early 1960s, the increasing willingness of braceros to leave their camps and join local workers' strikes caused the program to lose popularity among growers. This contributed to its abolition. Trump's program to fill labor needs would pose the same challenges, but also opportunities for organizing.


Resistance in working-class communities

For decades, immigration enforcement has combined workplace enforcement with community-based raids and sweeps. Chicago's working-class neighborhoods have a long history of large marches to protest immigration raids. As Obama entered his second term in 2013, activists, including Occupy Chicago, blocked buses headed to immigration courts. Emma Lozano of the Center Without Borders and other labor activists were arrested. Similar direct action tactics were used in Tucson, Arizona, by young people who chained themselves to buses transporting detainees to the special immigration court.

Trump's 2016 campaign promised to turn Chicago into a hotbed of enforcement. As the anti-immigrant hysteria promoted by his campaign spread, ICE began stopping people on the street, knocking on apartment doors and pulling people out for detention. The enforcement spree, which continued through 2019, included raids on street corners and sidewalks near Home Depot and other gathering spots for day laborers. The public presence of day laborers has historically made them a particular target of immigration street raids.

Activists responded to Trump's threat with action. In 2019, thousands of people marched through the Loop chanting "Immigrants are welcome here!" and in Federal Plaza after learning that ICE agents were about to be deployed.

Unions helped organize the resistance. Don Villar, a Filipino immigrant who headed the Chicago Federation of Labor, told protesters, "Throughout the labor movement's history, immigrants have enriched the fabric of our city, our neighborhoods, our workforce, and our labor movement. Many of the fundamental rights that immigrants struggle to attain are the same rights the labor movement fights to secure for all workers every day."

Chicago also saw one of the most effective direct actions in the campaign against deportations. As President Obama prepared his re-election campaign in 2012, young undocumented immigrants, brought to the United States as children, occupied his campaign office. The occupation capped two years of organizing marches, fiercely fighting the detention of activists. They pushed for the passage of a law that would grant them amnesty from deportation. After his re-election, Obama issued an executive order, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, that postponed their deportation.

DACA has withstood a legal onslaught for a decade, but right-wing courts and the MAGA administration will no doubt try again to kill it. For hundreds of thousands of people who had to provide personal information when applying, immigration authorities will be able to use it to find and detain them.

The same problem faces beneficiaries of Temporary Protected Status, which allows people fleeing environmental or political dangers to stay and work in the United States. If Trump tries to withdraw the protection, legally or not, the information to detain people is already in the hands of the government.

The most effective resistance to immigration in recent history hinged on the massive immigrant marches of 2006. Sparked by the House passage of HR 4425, the Sensenbrenner Act, people took to the streets by the millions on May Day. The law would have made it a federal crime to be in the United States without immigration papers, a danger so extreme that it threatened every family. The demonstration relied on Spanish-language radio to spread the word, and on networks of immigrant rights activists and organizations that brought together people from the same places of origin.

Labor unions were prominent among the mobilizers, organizing one of two marches held on the same day in Los Angeles, each drawing more than a million participants. Unions and immigrant networks organized marches of hundreds of thousands in cities across the country. The message was further strengthened by a grassroots movement, "A Day Without Mexicans," which urged immigrant workers to stay home to demonstrate how essential their labor is.  When some participants were fired on their return, some unions became involved in defending their right to protest.

The movement achieved its short-term goal: HR 4425 died. But the cultural impact was just as important. May Day had been attacked as the "communist holiday" in the Cold War, and celebrations became tiny or disappeared altogether. After 2006, the United States joined the rest of the world in celebrating it, and marches are now held widely every year. While not as large as in 2006, annual May Day marches bring out progressive community and labor activists in large numbers - and could provide a readymade vehicle for challenging a renewed Trump deportation threat.

A similar bill, California's Proposition 187, which would have denied schools and medical care to undocumented children and families, also had unintended consequences. Proposition 187 convinced many Los Angeles immigrants and their citizen children to become voters, and the leftward movement of the city and state's politics owes a lot to that decision. As a result, labor now has a powerful political bloc in LA - in a city that was the "Citadel of the Open Shop" just a few decades ago.

Both May Day and the Day Without Immigrants became a vehicle to protest Trump's first inauguration. In San Francisco, members of several chapters of the Democratic Socialists of America marked the first May Day after Trump's election with a direct action blocking ICE's garage doors with a human chain, brandishing signs reading "Sanctuary for All" and "We Protect Our Community." In the mobilizations surrounding them, labor support for immigrant workers facing raids grew. Four unions declared, "We will march and stand in solidarity with our immigrant worker brothers and sisters against the Trump administration's terrorist tactics."


Defending Against Workplace Raids

The decades following the Cold War saw workers and unions developing increasingly sophisticated strategies to resist immigration enforcement. From factory floors to union halls, these battles helped shape today's immigrant rights movement.

One of the first battles against workplace raids took place at the Kraco car radio factory in Los Angeles in the early 1980s. Workers who joined the United Electrical Workers union stopped production lines to force the owner to deny entry to immigration agents and saved each other from deportation. Later, the Molders Union Local 164 in Oakland joined the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund in suing the Immigration and Naturalization Service over its practice of having agents lock factory gates, hold workers prisoner, and then interrogate and detain undocumented workers. The case went to the U.S. Supreme Court, which declared the practice unconstitutional. They still cannot enter without a warrant and names of people.

In one of the Bush administration's final raids in 2008, immigration agents took 481 workers from Howard Industries, a Mississippi electrical equipment manufacturer, to a private detention center in Jena, Louisiana. They were not charged, had no access to lawyers and could not be released on bail. Jim Evans, national organizer for the AFL-CIO in Mississippi and a leading member of the state legislature's Black Caucus, said, "This raid is an effort to drive immigrants out of Mississippi and a blow to immigrants, African Americans, whites and unions - all those who want political change here."

Evans, other members of the black caucus, many of the state's unions, and immigrant communities all saw shifting demographics as the basis for changing the state's politics. They organized the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance (MIRA) as a vehicle for protecting the immigrant part of that constituency.

By the 2000s, these workplace battles had evolved into complex struggles over race, labor rights, and political power in the South.  Howard Industries, one of the state's few unionized factories, paid $2 an hour less than the industry norm. "The people who benefit from Mississippi's low-wage system want it to stay the way it is," Evans said, charging that the immigration raid was used to undermine the union.

MIRA activists responded to the raid with organizing and sitting on the grass with the families of those arrested. "When the shift changed, African American workers started coming out and they approached these Latina women and started hugging them," MIRA organizer Victoria Cintra recalled. "They were saying things like, 'We're with you. We're glad you're here. '" MIRA's key strategy is to forge unity between immigrant and African American workers.

In 2011, Chipotle fired hundreds of its workers throughout Minnesota. Their crime was that they were working but had no immigration papers. Thousands of laid-off workers were targeted by the Obama administration's key immigration enforcement program: identifying undocumented workers and then forcing companies to fire them. Without work or money for rent and food, they would presumably "self-deport." In Minneapolis, Seattle and San Francisco, more than 1,800 janitors lost their jobs. In 2009, more than 2,000 young women working on American Apparel sewing machines were fired in Los Angeles. Obama's ICE director, John Morton, said ICE had audited more than 2,900 companies in just one year, and the number of layoffs ran into the tens of thousands.

In Minneapolis, the Service Employees Union Local 26 helped Chipotle workers organize marches and demonstrations, in cooperation with the United Workers Center in Struggle, a local worker center, and the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee. They were arrested for civil disobedience at a Chipotle restaurant and organized a boycott of the chain. With this pressure, the layoffs at Chipotle stopped.

It is now almost certain that this enforcement tactic will be key for the new administration as well. When Trump was inaugurated in 2017, many unions expected workplace raids and firings to be a major part of his enforcement program as well. The hotel union in Oakland, California, developed a proactive strategy to keep ICE out of workplaces and called on the Oakland City Council to protect immigrants on the job. The city council passed a resolution noting that it has been a "city of refuge" since the anti-apartheid movement of the mid-1980s.

Trump is threatening again, as he did in 2016, to end federal funding to more than 300 sanctuary cities. In addition, many cities, and even some states, have withdrawn from the 287(g) program, which requires police to arrest and detain people based on their immigration status. Trump promises to reinstate it and cancel federal funding to cities that do not cooperate.

Seeking alternatives, like many unions, HERE Local 2850 (now part of Unitehere Local 2) began negotiating protections in union contracts. They require managers to notify them if immigration agents try to enter, question workers, or demand documents. The contract says the hotel has to keep agents out unless they have a court order. The union then helped workers hold out at a hotel where new owners demanded they show their immigration papers to keep their jobs. All of the hotel workers refused, documented and undocumented alike, and the company backed down.

California's janitorial union, SEIU United Service Workers West, wrote the Immigrant Worker Protection Act, a state law that requires employers to seek a court order before granting ICE agents access to a workplace. It prohibits employers from sharing sensitive information, such as Social Security numbers, without a warrant. The law came after years of fighting workplace raids and immigration-related firings. In 2011, Los Angeles janitors sat down at city intersections to protest layoffs at Able Building Maintenance, and fought similar layoffs at Stanford University cafeterias and among janitors at Apple and Hewlett-Packard's Silicon Valley buildings.

When Trump took office in 2017, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), Filipino Advocates for Justice and several other groups held trainings to prepare workers for raids. Union members role-played situations in which labor strikes were used to protect each other. Some were veterans of an earlier organizing drive among recycling workers, in which they stopped work to prevent the company from firing employees for not having papers.

At the beginning of the Bush administration workers in wealthy Palm Springs, California, fought a crucial battle. They were working at the luxury Palm Canyon resort for $4.75 an hour, and they began organizing with Hotel and Restaurant Employees Local 309 (HERE). The hotel hired security guards, dressed in uniforms imitating those of the Border Patrol, and began firing workers. Immigrant housekeepers organized a silent march in the street, prayed in the parking lot, and then refused to go back to work.

With the support of Local 309, they remained on strike for four months. Palm Canyon was eventually forced to agree to reinstate the workers with back pay. But when the hotel said only workers with legal immigration status could return, they all remained on strike for another month, documented and undocumented together, until they all returned.

What makes the Palm Canyon experience important today is not just the workers' inspiring courage, but the strategic ideas that guided them. They organized around the concrete conditions of their lives. Faced with legal repression and layoffs, they defied efforts to make them suffer. Knowing they could not fight alone, they sought help. The union stood by them. And most important, they stuck together.

That same year, the AFL-CIO held its convention in Los Angeles, focused on organizing immigrant workers. Rejecting its history of supporting anti-immigrant legislation, the union federation adopted a resolution calling for immigration amnesty for undocumented immigrants and the repeal of the 1986 law that prevents them from working. Palm Canyon strikers were among the many witnesses at the subsequent union hearings organized around the country to expose the violation of immigrant workers' rights.  Hearings and public exposure is an important a tactic for resistance in a new Trump administration as it was then.


Beyond the Threat of Deportation

In the civil rights era, the fight against Cold War mass deportations and the bracero program was two-pronged. Leaders of the Chicano civil rights movement in particular-Bert Corona, Cesar Chavez, Larry Itliong, Dolores Huerta-fought to end the program, a demand they won in 1964. But the movement did more than fight abuses. It proposed and fought for more fundamental change.

In part, this played out on the ground. In 1965, Larry Itliong and veteran Filipino farm unionists initiated the Great Grape Strike, a year after the program ended. That same year, the civil rights movement among Chicanos, Mexicans, and Asian Americans achieved a fundamental change in U.S. immigration law. The family preference system, which favored family reunification over the labor needs of employers, became the basis of U.S. immigration policy, at least for a time.

In the flow of people crossing the border, "we see our families and coworkers, while the farmers only see money," says farm and domestic worker organizer Rene Saucedo. "So we have to fight for what we really need, and not just what we don't want." In other words, the fight to stop deportations requires fighting for an alternative. There have been many such alternative proposals over the past two decades, from the Dignity Campaign to the American Friends Service Committee's New Path. Today, the movement for an alternative is centered on the Registry Bill, a proposal that would give legal status to an estimated 8 million undocumented people. The bill would update the cutoff date that determines which undocumented immigrants are eligible to apply for legal permanent residence. Right now, only people who arrived before January 1, 1973 can apply for it - a tiny and vanishing number. The proposal would bring the date to the present.

Another, longer-range demand is the extension of voting rights. It is no accident that many of the counties and states where the undocumented workforce is concentrated, and where it produces the most profit for employers, are MAGA strongholds. If the whole working population of Phoenix and Tucson could actually vote, it would likely elect representatives who would pass social protections for all workers. Extending the franchise could add enough people to the political coalition in Mississippi to enable it to finally expel the Dixie establishment. So instead of thinking of the vote as a restricted privilege, as we are taught, we need to think of it as a working-class weapon - and understand how powerful class unity could make us across the lines of immigration status.

Likewise, the political education of the American working class has to include an understanding of the roots of migration. U.S. actions abroad, from military intervention to economic sanctions to neoliberal reforms, make migration a matter of survival. When Mexicans fight for the right to stay home rather than come north, and elect a government that promises to move in that direction, they deserve and need the support of the working class on the northern side of the border. Cross-border solidarity has a long history, but the media denies us knowledge of it. Without an independent effort to educate workers, the door is opened to MAGA and closed to our ability to organize in our own interest.

Faced with 281 million people living outside their countries of origin, the United Nations has adopted the Convention on the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families. This Convention supports the right to family reunification, establishes the principle of "equal treatment" with citizens of the host country in relation to employment and education, protects migrants against collective deportation and makes both countries of origin and destination responsible for protecting these rights. However, so far only forty-nine migrant-sending countries, like Mexico and the Philippines, have ratified it.

No US administration, Democrat or Republican, has ever submitted it to Congress for ratification.


The Importance of History

The history of working-class organizing in the United States is full of examples of immigrant resistance to mass deportation, sweeps, and other tactics. Time and again, immigrant worker activity has changed the course of society. It has produced unions of workers ranging from copper miners to janitors. It turned the politics of Los Angeles head. And it is this tradition of worker resistance that is the real target of immigration enforcement waves, both current and threatened by the incoming administration.

Organizers of the past fought deportation threats just as we do today, and their experiences offer valuable insights for our present situation. Not only did they show tremendous perseverance in the face of direct threats, but these organizers also envisioned a future of greater equality, working-class rights, and social solidarity - and proposed ways to get there. Increased immigration repression has a way of making the bones of the system easier to see and the reasons for changing it abundantly clear. These organizations and coalitions defending immigrant workers, their families, and their communities have often been building blocks for movements for deeper social change.

The rich tradition of worker organizing against immigrant repression is a story of courageous struggle and a reservoir of strategic thinking that can help immigrant workers and communities confront the promised MAGA wave of repression.

In the outpouring of fear and outrage over Donald Trump's threat to deport millions of undocumented immigrants, many have drawn parallels to the mass deportations of 1932-33. At the height of the Great Depression hunger haunted the homes of millions of working-class people.  Relief authorities denied food to Mexican and Mexican American families, and appealed to the government to deport them, claiming that forcing them to leave would save money and open up jobs for citizens. These age-old lies have been recycled repeatedly over the last century, most recently by the MAGA campaign.

Hunger was indeed a powerful weapon to force people to leave. Thousands were swept up in street raids, and many more fled because of the terror these raids produced. Voluntarily or not, people were loaded into boxcars and dumped at the border gates. The euphemism of the 1930s was "repatriation." Today's immigration enforcers call it "self-deportation." The idea remains the same, and Trump and J. D. Vance are only the latest proponents of this inhumane policy.

People resisted deportation through the radical organizations of the era, from the Congreso de Pueblos de Habla Española to the unions formed in bloody strikes in mines and fields. The largest farm labor strike in US history, the Pixley cotton strike, erupted in 1933 across the barrios of California's San Joaquin Valley during that peak deportation year. Radical activists were singled out for deportation and defended by communist and socialist defense organizations, including later the Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born. The Mexican government of the time, only a decade after the revolution, also protested and tried to help deportees.

This history of resistance is as important to remember as the history of the deportations themselves. The organizations created by resistance, and the larger working-class movement of which they were a part, survived the deportation wave. While many groups were put on the attorney general's list of subversive organizations during the Cold War, others emerged during the civil rights era. When the immigrant rights movement peaked again in recent decades, it inherited this legacy.

It is a history of courageous struggle and a reservoir of strategic thinking that can help immigrant workers and communities confront the repression promised by today's MAGA.



Thursday, January 2, 2025

FULL IMMIGRANT RIGHTS IN FIFTY YEARS?

FULL IMMIGRANT RIGHTS IN FIFTY YEARS?
By David Bacon
Dollars and Sense, 11-12/24
https://dollarsandsense.org/archives/2024/1124fiftyyears.html

For the 50th-anniversary issue of Dollars and Sense, editors asked David Bacon, a contributor for 30 of those years, to imagine what U.S. immigration policy could look like 50 years from now. Here is his answer.

Given the descent of U.S. immigration policy from its high point in 1965 to its current disastrous low, it might seem unrealistic to describe other than a dystopian vision of the future fifty years from now.  Today even a Democratic Presidential campaign proposes draconian restrictions and has virtually abandoned any progressive proposals, in order to compete for votes with an even more racist Republican framework.

Yet in 1965 a progressive immigration bill was part of a broad set of transformative legislation, the product of a popular consensus created by the civil rights movement.  It drew on decades of organizing and struggle to prioritize the needs of families and communities over employers' contract labor programs. It weakened racial quotas and the racist foundations of immigration restrictions.  For a time, the use of immigration policy to punish political radicalism through deportations, and banning the entry of Communists and other dissidents, was ended by a Supreme Court that obeyed the popular will.

Keeping that history in mind, it is important to project a vision of immigrant justice, of the world as it might and should be.  It must be based on what actually meets the needs and desires of working people, and to move beyond the discourse over what a conservative Congress and its compliant media hold possible. That vision has been articulated by the left before. In 1986 leftwing immigrant rights activists opposed the Immigration Reform and Control Act, which traded an amnesty program for making it illegal for undocumented people to work, and beginning the militarization of the border.

Later they opposed the same tradeoff in the so-called comprehensive immigration reform proposals under Presidents Bush and Obama.  As an alternative based on labor and human rights, the American Friends Service Committee wrote "A New Path," and a coalition of labor and community organizations formulated the Dignity Campaign platform.  Others made similar proposals.

They were all based on the idea that radical reform is still possible under capitalism, while some viewed it as a step towards even more fundamental and structural change.  Achieving even reforms, however, requires a broad peoples' movement, able to restrict corporate activity and government policies that defend it. Those reforms would place peoples' needs to move, work and unite their families at the center, and develop economic and racial policies that find and create common ground between newcomers and longtime residents.

A movement for immigrant justice will be able to achieve basic change if it is part of the larger effort that unites people fighting injustice in all parts of U.S. society.  This is true not just because immigrants will only have the power they need in this broad alliance, but because the issues of immigrant justice are so intimately tied to so many others.  Demanding climate justice, for instance, includes addressing the forced migration produced by the disasters caused by global warming.  It means meeting the demands made by former colonies on wealthy nations, in compensation for the disasters caused by the industrialization built on the profits from colonial exploitation.

The movement of millions of people in the current world is a forced movement, caused by the legacy of colonialism, and by the continuing reasons why people have to leave home - poverty, hunger and war.  A world in half a century could be a world of justice in which the destructive consequences of capitalist development are acknowledged, and in which U.S. policy changes the way it produces displacement and inequality today.  This change in public attitudes will require a massive educational campaign about the real reasons for displacement.

In this just world of the future, the people's movement world-wide will have overcome the power of corporations and monopolies that profit from a war-ridden, unequal world.  The basis for corporate investment itself will have to change.  While private investment is part of capitalism, it can be restricted.  If U.S. corporations invest in factories in other countries, for instance, they must produce for the consumption of the people of those countries.  They cannot create export platforms to compete with factories in the U.S., using different standards of living to make profits.  Trade agreements and neoliberal economic policies, to create lower living standards and thereby profitable investment conditions, will be a thing of the past in a more just world.  Those conditions have been a primary source of the migration of displaced communities.

In that just world, U.S. activity in other countries in general will be subject to the decisions of local communities and worker organizations.  The people's movement in the U.S. will support democratic movements seeking to raise living standards, guarantee political and social rights, and the ability to stay on the land for rural people.  The activity of the U.S. government to undermine those movements will end.  We have a long history of international solidarity in this country, and it can become a majority movement more powerful than even those that opposed apartheid in South Africa, intervention in Central America and the Vietnam War.

The worst of the profit-making activity by U.S. corporations abroad is the sale of arms and the fomenting of war.  Millions of people are forced into migration as a result.  Here the interests of people in war-torn countries and people in the U.S. itself are the same.  The production of arms by U.S. corporations must be cut to a tiny fraction of its current level, and the export of arms ended completely.  While not all conflicts are the direct product of U.S. intervention, we can reduce their number by not contributing to them.  At the same time, coming to terms with history will mean the payment of reparations for the damages done, whether in Gaza, Vietnam or Haiti.  Rebuilding, under the control of the people of those countries rather than local elites or foreign agencies, will create the possibility of a full life, giving communities a future where they live, rather than forcing their members into exile as refugees.

At the same time, we will finally acknowledge that the movement of people is part of the human experience.  In our schools, in the media and in our politics we will speak of voluntary movement and migration as, not only a human right, but as a positive value.  Success in this will produce the political base for the complete reorientation of the way we see the border.  The walls will be torn down in a celebration of our common roots as Mexicans, Canadians and U.S. people.  In its place, two friendship parks will extend from ocean to ocean, in the south and in the north.  The Peace Arch at the Blaine Canadian border crossing will be multiplied, and decorated with the same profusion of art and graffiti that artists have displayed on today's border wall.

The arrival of new people into our communities and worksites will be welcomed, and the purpose of immigration policy will be to facilitate their movement, making it easier for people to keep families together, and find homes and jobs.  There is enough work for all people in this country, although the current vicious economic system continuously places us into competition.  Over the next 50 years a people's movement can force the acceptance of what was the basic premise of the Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act - where the private sector cannot produce enough jobs for everyone, the public sector will do so.  By ending the military budget and taxing the wealthy, we will have plenty of money to employ people to meet our basic needs in providing free medical care, free education in modern schools with highly paid and respected teachers, low-cost well-maintained public housing, and a rebuilt infrastructure from mass transit to internet.  

More workers will be needed, and are in fact needed now.  The contract labor programs that have been the source of enormous abuse, however, will be ended.  If employers need workers, they will have to raise wages and provide decent secure jobs in order to attract them.  At the same time, unions will grow as workers gain more political and economic power, and job rights will be expanded for all workers, including especially the enforceable right to organize.  To get hired, all workers will simply show their  Social Security number.  The Social Security and benefit system (which will include a national health system) will enroll everyone, and everyone will be equally entitled to benefits.  Discrimination because of national origin will be illegal in all aspects of life.

Addiction to drugs will be treated as a medical and social problem, and will no longer be criminalized.  Treatment centers will help people deal with addiction.  With better housing and jobs, and a future in livable communities, the market for drugs will shrink.  Since the cartels that supply drugs are a product of that market, it will become much easier to deal with them.  

Legalization instead of punishment is part of a broader movement to end the carceral system.  Immigrants will benefit from that, as well as people of color and working people in general.  With no need for immigration enforcement, the detention centers, private and public, can be torn down like the wall.  No need for sweeps, or an immigration enforcement system of thousands of agents, cops, judges and special courts.

It is easy to imagine a better world, and hard to win.  

Before the cold war, the defense of the rights of immigrants in the U.S. was mounted mostly by immigrant working class communities, and the alliances they built with the left wing of the U.S. labor movement.  In the 1950s, at the height of the cold war, U.S. immigration policy became more overtly a labor supply scheme than at any other time in its history.  Radical immigrant rights leaders were targeted for deportation, and the combination of enforcement and contract labor reached a peak.  In 1954 1,075,168 Mexicans were deported from the U.S.  And from 1956 to 1959, between 432,491 and 445,197 Mexicans were brought into the U.S. each year as braceros.
    
In less than a decade the civil rights movement ended the bracero program, and created an alternative to the deportation regime.  Chicano activists of the 1960s - Ernesto Galarza, Cesar Chávez, Bert Corona, Larry Itliong, Dolores Huerta and others - convinced Congress in 1964 to repeal the law authorizing the bracero program and in 1965 to pass immigration legislation that established new pathways for legal immigration.  Essentially, a family- and community-oriented system replaced the old labor supply/deportation program.

A new era of rights and equality for migrants won't begin in Washington DC, any more than the civil rights movement did.  Human rights will be a product of the social movements of this country.  That's what made possible advances in 1965 that were called unrealistic and politically impossible ten years earlier.  Just as it took a civil rights movement to pass the Voting Rights Act, any basic change to establish the rights of immigrants will also require a social upheaval and a fundamental realignment of power.  


Dollars and Sense editor Chris Sturr followed up with an interview about these ideas on Economics for the People, a program on KKFI, 90.1FM, in Kansas City.  The interview begins at 38 minutes into the show.
https://kkfi.org/program-episodes/ep15-50th-anniversary-celebration-for-dollars-and-sense-magazine/


Tuesday, December 31, 2024

photos from the edge 08 - the abandoned waterpark

photos from the edge 08 - the abandoned waterpark

Won't you get hip to this timely tip?
When you make that California trip
Get your kicks on Route 66
    - Bobby Troup and the King Cole Trio

Cars heading west on the old Route 66, now I-15, fly out of the high Mojave Desert at breakneck speed toward Barstow.  For miles the desert's palette has ranged from brown and yellow to a dull green of far-off mountains.  Suddenly, across the hardpan to the north, unusual structures appear - a not-quite-mirage in the distance.  For a brief moment, iridescent colors encrust strange concrete shapes, as though they'd landed from an alternate universe.  They flash by, and then they're gone in the rear view mirror.  

They're a photographer's dream, if you can slow down enough to get off the highway and retrace your path along a pitted frontage road.  That takes you to an abandoned waterpark.  We Californians have a quixotic streak - who else would think of building a waterpark in the middle of the Mojave Desert?

Bob Byers apparently did.  Taking advantage of the Mojave River's intermittent and mostly underground aquifer, he created a lagoon with swings for his family in the early 1950s.  It became a popular campground, and then over five decades expanded and morphed into a series of amusement parks - Lake Dolores, Rock-a-Houla and finally Discovery Park.  The last one closed twenty years ago, perhaps victim to the magnetic attraction of Las Vegas, 150 miles east - the origin or destination of I-15's high speed river of cars and trucks.

I don't know who began tagging and painting the structures.  As I took photographs of the strange buildings and skeletal remains of what must have been the supports for waterslides, I met four young Chicanas.  They'd grown up in nearby Newberry Springs, but didn't know the artists, or perhaps they didn't want to say.  They'd never known the park as a waterpark - "It was before my time," one laughed.  It's a place to take your friends or novios, to wander through and wonder what it must have been like - so much water then, and so dry now.

Another photographer from Norway had heard about it somehow.  We'd see each other at a distance, each trying to incorporate surreal colors and shapes into a visual language of images.  Conversation was unnecessary beyond a brief acknowledgement, each of us pointing lens and camera at a new moment's discovery.  I could have stayed for hours.  

My partner exercised great and unusual patience, eventually falling asleep in the car as I wandered through the brilliant December light.  But the new espresso cafe in Barstow, created by Italian/Chicana visionaries Yvonne and Elfrida Butticci, was calling out its caffeine song to me, and we left.

It was like a dream.  These photographs are its fragments.

You can see the color images by clicking here.





























Sunday, December 22, 2024

MIGRANT WORKERS AS AN IMPEDIMENT TO MASS DEPORTATION: A Q&Q WITH DAVID BACON

MIGRANT WORKERS AS AN IMPEDIMENT TO MASS DEPORTATION: A Q&Q WITH DAVID BACON

The Border Chronicle, 12/12/24

https://www.theborderchronicle.com/p/migrant-workers-as-an-impediment?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=373432&post_id=153031157&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=8mf9r&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

 

 

 

Immigrant workers from the Woodfin Suites hotel and their supporters rally outside the hotel in Emeryville, California, while white students from college Republican clubs counterdemonstrate in support of the company. Hotel managers fired 20 workers, accusing them of lacking legal permission to work. (Photo by David Bacon)

 

 

President-elect Donald Trump says he will enact a mass-deportation operation starting his first week in office. But according to photojournalist, author, and organizer David Bacon, there are serious limitations on what he can do, because big business in the United States depends so heavily on migrant labor.

 

What follows in this interview is an analysis, from a worker's perspective, of Trump's promise to ramp up immigration enforcement. Bacon's analysis is informed by his history as a union organizer, decades of research and writing through multiple administrations, including Trump's first term, as well as knowledge of the global economic system. Bacon offers several examples of how undocumented workers organized, mobilized, and prepared for potential raids in the past, and notes that corporate bosses are not necessarily keen on mass deportations.

 

Bacon has authored several books, including Illegal People: How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants, The Right to Stay Home: How U.S. Policy Drives Mexican Migration, and More than a Wall/Más que un muro.

 

 

What do Trump's mass-deportation plans mean for the U.S. economy and its many industries that depend on migrant labor?

 

Immigration enforcement doesn't exist for its own sake. It plays a role in a larger system that serves capitalist interests by supplying employers the labor force they require. Immigrant labor is more vital to many industries than it's ever been before. Over 50 percent of the country's agricultural workforce is undocumented, and the list of other industries that depend on immigrant labor is long-meatpacking, some construction trades, building services, health care, restaurant and retail service, and more.

 

Trump is not free to eliminate this workforce-which is an advantage and even a source of potential power for workers. Employers know this, and within months of his 2017 inauguration, agribusiness executives were already meeting with him to ensure that he would not follow through on his threats of raids and a tightened border when they needed labor. Last month construction companies in Texas were warning Trump that mass deportations would threaten their profits. Even in 2006, growers in California bused workers to the big marches in hopes that the Sensenbrenner bill wouldn't deprive them of workers.

 

But workers, communities, and unions can't depend on employers to battle Trump for them. What companies need is labor at a cost they want to pay. The existing system has worked well for them. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, about 8 million of the 11 to 12 million undocumented people in the U.S. are wageworkers, and most earn the minimum wage or close to it. The abysmal federal minimum of $7.25 an hour produces an annual income of $14,500. Even the higher minimums in states like California render an income of barely twice that. The average farmworker family income is below $25,000. Yet Social Security estimates that the average U.S. wage is $66,000.

 

That difference is a source of enormous profit. If the industries that depend on immigrant labor paid the average wage, they would have to pay undocumented workers an additional $250 billion, so the rewards they reap from low-wage labor are huge. Trump has to guarantee not just workers to contribute the labor, but labor at a cost that is acceptable to corporate employers. If we look at his cabinet picks, it is clear that their needs come first.

 

In his 2017 meetings with growers, Trump promised to expand the contract labor system, in which as many as 900,000 people recruited by employers work in the U.S. each year. These workers can come only to work, not to stay. Visa categories include the notorious H-2A program for farm labor, like the old bracero program of the 1950s. Last year growers were given 370,000 H-2A visa certifications-a sixth of the entire U.S. farm labor workforce. The program is known for abusing workers, and the recent reforms by Secretary of Labor Julie Su are already being targeted by growers and their MAGA allies for repeal. The H-2A program is huge, but similar ones are growing in hospitality, meatpacking, and other industries, even for teachers in schools.

 

 

What do you expect to see in terms of workplace raids? Will corporate executives also be arrested and jailed?

 

Workplace enforcement is based on a provision, called employer sanctions, of the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act. It makes it illegal for employers to hire undocumented workers. In reality, the law makes it illegal for people without papers to work. Over almost 50 years, the federal government has built up a database, called E-Verify, that seeks to identify every undocumented worker. ICE then requires employers to fire anyone it says is not in the U.S. legally.

 

Employers are almost never punished in this enforcement strategy. The only ones punished are workers, who lose their jobs and therefore can't pay rent, buy food, or survive. By making it impossible to live, the strategy seeks to force workers to "self-deport." Heavy workplace enforcement has also included raids, in which ICE enters workplaces and detains anyone they accuse of being undocumented. Both tactics have been used extensively by both Republican and Democratic administrations for half a century. Trump will undoubtedly make them a primary enforcement strategy too. There is also, however, a long history of resistance by workers and unions to workplace enforcement, and it is important to learn from that history the tactics we've used.

 

 


 

Migrant farmworkers, domestic workers, and their supporters march through San Francisco's Mission District to call for passage of the Registry Bill, which would allow undocumented people to gain legal immigration status. (Photo by David Bacon)

 

 

Under President George W. Bush, federal prosecutors charged workers with felonies for giving their employers a false Social Security number. He further proposed the complete enforcement of employer sanctions, but he was defeated in a suit filed by unions and civil rights organizations. Under President Obama, workplace enforcement was further systematized. In just one year, 2012, ICE audited 1,600 employers. Tens of thousands of workers were fired during Obama's eight years in office. Trump's announced appointments for the coming administration include some of the strongest advocates of this kind of enforcement.

 

In the period before Trump took office in 2017, many unions expected that workplace raids and firings would be a large part of his immigration enforcement program. The hotel union in Oakland, California, developed a proactive strategy to keep ICE away from workplaces, and it asked the Oakland City Council to protect immigrants on the job. The council passed a resolution, noting that Oakland has been a "city of refuge" since the anti-apartheid movement of the mid-1980s: "The City Council ... calls upon all employers to establish safe/sanctuary workplaces where workers are respected and not threatened or discriminated against based on their immigration status."

 

Like many unions, HERE Local 2850 (now part of UNITE HERE Local 2) sought alternatives by negotiating protections as part of their contracts with employers, requiring managers to notify the union if immigration agents tried to enter, interrogate workers, or demand papers. The contract says the hotel has to keep agents out unless they have a warrant. California's janitors union, SEIU United Service Workers West, drafted the Immigrant Worker Protection Act, a state law requiring employers to ask for a judicial warrant before granting ICE agents access to a workplace. It prohibits employers from sharing confidential information, like Social Security numbers, without a court order. The act came after years of fighting workplace raids and immigration-related firings.

 

As Trump took office in 2017, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, Filipino Advocates for Justice, and several other groups organized trainings to prepare workers for raids. Union members acted out scenarios that used job action to protect each other. Some were veterans of an earlier organizing campaign among recycling workers, in which they stopped work to keep the company from firing employees for not having papers.

 

 

What else do you foresee the new Trump administration doing on immigration? And what do workers need to do to fight back?

 

In the outpouring of fear and outrage over Trump's threat to deport millions of undocumented immigrants, many have drawn parallels to the mass deportations of 1932-33. At the height of the Great Depression, with hunger haunting the homes of millions of working-class people, the relief authorities of that era denied food to Mexican and Mexican American families. Racist bureaucrats appealed to the government to deport them, claiming that forcing them to leave would save money and open up jobs for citizens. These age-old lies have been recycled again and again for a century, repeated most recently by the MAGA campaign.

 

Hunger was really the most powerful weapon used to force people to leave. But thousands were also swept up in street raids, and many more fled because of the terror the raids produced. Voluntary or not, people were loaded into boxcars and dumped at the border gates. The euphemism of the 1930s was "repatriation." Today's immigration enforcers call it "self-deportation." The idea is the same, and Trump and Pence are only the latest in a long line of proponents of this inhuman idea.

 

So Trump's enforcement program intends to make the conditions of life for people without papers so bad that they will leave. He may need some mass raids to instill the terror, but he can't, and doesn't have to, pick up every undocumented person in order to do this. This is important because just as the raids will target certain people, our resistance can also be targeted. This is part of our history of resistance.

 

 

 

 

People of faith hold a vigil outside the immigration building in San Francisco, California, where immigrants have their hearings before being deported. (Photo by David Bacon)

 

 

The working-class neighborhoods of Chicago, for instance, have a long history of launching huge marches to protest immigration raids. As Obama entered his second term in 2013, activists, including Occupy Chicago, blocked buses going to the immigration courts. Emma Lozano, from Centro sin Fronteras, and other labor activists were arrested. Similar direct-action tactics were used in Tucson, Arizona, by young people who chained themselves to buses carrying detainees to the notorious special immigration court.

 

Trump's 2016 campaign promised to make Chicago a focus for both enforcement and resistance. As anti-immigrant hysteria promoted by his campaign spread, ICE began detaining people during traffic stops, knocking on apartment doors and pulling people off the street for interrogation and detention. The enforcement wave included sweeps of the corners and sidewalks near Home Depot and other gathering sites for day labors looking for work. The public presence of day laborers has historically made them a particular target for immigration street sweeps.

 

Activists met the Trump threat with actions. In July 2019 thousands of people marched through the Loop chanting "Immigrants are welcome here!" A day earlier they'd shown up at the Federal Plaza after hearing that ICE agents were about to be deployed. Unions helped organize the resistance.

 

 

What about cross-border solidarity? Do you have any examples of international organizing that might be inspiring?

 

The relationship between cross-border solidarity and immigrant rights is based on an important reality. If we think of Mexico as being its people, and not simply a geographic place, then part of Mexico exists in the U.S. In Mexico this idea is called el gran México, or Greater Mexico. Mexican communities that are the home of migrants also increasingly discuss the existence of two rights-the right to social equality and labor rights in the U.S., and the right to stay home for people who don't want to be forced to leave in order to survive.

 

Increasingly, these rights animate the discussions of migrant organizations in the U.S. as well. The outpouring of support for Andrés Manuel López Obrador's campaigns among people north of the border, for instance, has been based not just on a love of democracy but on his promise to end the neoliberal reforms in Mexico imposed under pressure from the U.S and World Bank. Those reforms, intended to make Mexico profitable for foreign investors, have caused the poverty that forced people to leave in order to survive.

 

Organizations in U.S. communities of Mexican migrants often have, therefore, a more sophisticated analysis of what immigration justice requires. It means fighting for political change in both countries-against immigration-based repression in the U.S. and for change in Mexico, which creates the basis for a full life. In cities from Los Angeles to Fresno, from Chicago to New York, Mexican migrant organizations are among the most active organizers of demonstrations and resistance. The high point was undoubtedly May Day 2006, when millions of people marched to defeat the Sensenbrenner bill, a proposed law that would have made it a federal felony to be undocumented.

 

 

 

SHERIDAN PRIZE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY AWARDED TO THIS PHOTOGRAPH

 

The Sheridan Prize for Photography, encompassing art created by artists in the 9 San Francisco Bay Area counties and Sacramento and Santa Cruz counties has been awarded by jurist Eduardo Soler to “Watermelon Crew Tossing Melons”, a photograph by David Bacon.