http://themilitant.com/2017/8106/810601.html
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Vol. 81/No. 6 February 13, 2017
(lead article)
Gov’t orders target refugees, immigrants,
workers’ unity
Workers debate how to defend immigrants, jobs
Militant/Betsey Stone
Jan. 29 San Francisco airport protest, one of dozens nationwide
demanding government release immigrants barred entry after Washington
begins enforcement of anti-working-class executive orders issued by
President Donald Trump, building on two decades of government attacks.
BY NAOMI CRAINE
Thousands of people across the country took to the streets to protest a
series of executive orders signed by President Donald Trump attacking
immigrants and refugees in the name of “national security” in times of
war. The orders lay preparations for expanding deportations of workers
without papers.
They build on anti-working-class measures taken over the last 20 years
by Democratic and Republican administrations alike that have broadened
the powers of the immigration police; built fencing along the Mexican
border; stepped up deportations of immigrant workers accused of being
“criminals”; expanded “E-Verify” document checks that keep workers
without papers in a second-class, superexploited status; and targeted
refugees in countries in the Mideast and North Africa where Washington’s
wars, military actions and threats have led to deepening crises.
The White House decrees include an indefinite ban on refugees from
Syria; a four-month ban on refugees worldwide; and a three-month ban on
travel to the U.S. from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and
Yemen while the administration prepares a regime of “extreme vetting.”
Travelers from those seven countries were already subject to intensive
“vetting” under the Barack Obama administration’s “Visa Waiver Program
Improvement and Terrorist Travel Prevention Act of 2015.”
Demonstration organizers see the actions as part of a broader war
against the legitimacy of Trump’s presidency, falsely portrayed by many
as fascist. Many of the signs and chants at the protests targeted the
Trump administration as “illegitimate” and portrayed the president and
those who voted for him as “deplorables” and racist bigots — often in
very crude terms.
Like at the large bourgeois feminist marches Jan. 21, these protests
were shaped by liberals and middle-class leftists who are campaigning to
capture the Democratic Party and take back Congress in 2018.
Many workers around the country told interviewers they were put off by
the inhumane way the orders were implemented, but remained concerned
about competition for jobs in times of economic crisis for working
people and fearful of the possibility of terror attacks.
“The bipartisan propaganda by the propertied rulers blaming undocumented
workers for joblessness and Muslims for terrorism affects this debate,”
Osborne Hart, Socialist Workers Party candidate for mayor in New York,
told the Militant. “As our party goes door to door talking to workers we
find an open hearing to our proposals to unite the working class in
struggle for jobs, for an end to the criminalization of immigrants and
for an end to imperialism’s wars.”
Rulers label immigrants as criminals
One executive order issued by Trump on Jan. 25, titled “Border Security
and Immigration Enforcement Improvements,” states that it is government
policy to extend the wall on the Mexican border, speed up deportations,
expand immigration detention facilities and add 5,000 Border Patrol agents.
The order traces its continuity to the Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, signed by then President Bill
Clinton. The average daily population of men, women and children held in
immigration detention centers soared from 8,000 before the law to 34,000
in 2014.
The other Jan. 25 executive order, “Enhancing Public Safety in the
Interior of the United States,” includes a threat to cut federal funds
to any self-proclaimed “sanctuary jurisdictions,” which have been set up
mostly by Democrats in New York, Los Angeles and elsewhere. Put forward
as humanitarian moves, these “sanctuary” arrangements do nothing to
address the illegal status that keeps undocumented immigrants in fear as
a low-wage and unorganized labor force.
On Jan. 27, Trump signed another order dubbed, “Protecting the Nation
from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States,” aimed at
restricting entry of refugees and targeting Muslims.
Washington implemented the policy immediately, and dozens of travelers
with visas to enter the U.S., including some with permanent residence
status, were detained at airports across the country.
Thousands of protesters gathered at New York’s Kennedy and other
airports across the country Jan. 28, demanding release of the detainees.
The New York Taxi Workers Alliance, which has 19,000 members, held a
one-hour strike halting rides from Kennedy and joined the demonstration.
“As an organization whose membership is largely Muslim, a workforce
that’s almost universally immigrant,” the alliance said, “we say no to
this inhumane and unconstitutional ban.”
Several federal judges issued injunctions blocking deportations of
detained travelers. The White House said Jan. 29 that the ban would not
apply to green-card holders, reversing its earlier position.
Washington’s existing policies already prevent the vast majority of
those seeking refuge from entering the U.S. Only those approved by a
United Nations refugee agency — less than 1 percent of those fleeing
violence or persecution worldwide — can even apply to settle here.
Applicants are then screened by at least four different U.S. government
entities, a process that takes years. Washington allows entry for fewer
refugees per capita than almost any other imperialist country.
Related articles:
‘Amnesty for immigrants! Stop the deportations!’
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