http://themilitant.com/2017/8146/814620.html
The Militant (logo)
Vol. 81/No. 46 December 11, 2017
(editorial)
No deportations! Amnesty now!
We urge all working people to speak out against the U.S. government’s
decision to eliminate Temporary Protected Status for Haitians and
Nicaraguans, and to demand they drop consideration of similar expulsion
of Salvadorans and Hondurans. This decision will force tens of thousands
of workers to leave the U.S. or face deportation. This attempt to divide
and weaken the working class must be opposed.
Join and help build the national rally against these anti-working-class
moves Dec. 6 in Washington, D.C.!
TPS, as the status is commonly known, was not granted because of the
humanitarian concerns of the ruling class. It was begun in 1990 because
the propertied rulers worried that the deportation of thousands to
Haiti, El Salvador and Honduras would destabilize U.S.-backed regimes
and threaten U.S. capitalist investments in the midst of the severe
social and economic crises there.
By making the status temporary, they hoped to keep immigrants under TPS
in a precarious position, willing to accept lower wages, wary of joining
unions, and to use them along with others without permanent papers to
drive down the wages of all. By making the suspension of deportation
temporary, but renewable, they hoped to undercut any movement to fight
for amnesty.
U.S.- and foreign-born workers work side by side in the same factories
today, we send our children to the same schools, and have done so for
years. There is less anti-immigrant prejudice in the working class than
ever before. We face the same bosses, who push down our wages, speed up
the pace of work and cut corners on safety in an effort to boost their
profits.
This is a life-and-death question for the working class. We need to
unite and speak out, “We don’t care where you were born, what language
you speak, what color your skin is. Let’s stand up and fight together!”
Amnesty for immigrant workers in the U.S. now! Stop the deportations!
Front page (for this issue) | Home | Text-version home