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Polls Don't Capture Blacks' Intense Debate Over Immigration
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, New America Media
Though many African Americans have told
pollsters they support the struggles of undocumented immigrants,
others are protesting for stricter enforcement of immigration laws.
LOS ANGELES--Two things happened within a day of each other this
month that rammed race back into the debate over illegal
immigration. A Field Poll in California found that blacks by a
bigger percentage than whites, and even American-born Latinos, back
liberal immigration reform measures. The very next day, a spirited
group of black activists marched in front of the Los Angeles office
of popular and outspoken black California House Democrat Maxine
Waters, protesting her firm support of citizenship for illegal
immigrants.
The protesters claimed that the overwhelming majority of blacks
oppose illegal immigration. They denounced black leaders such as
Waters, Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton for allegedly selling out
black interests by backing immigration reform. The Field Poll
findings and the flap between Waters and the black anti-immigration
protesters is another painful example of the deep fissure that the
illegal immigration debate has opened among blacks.
The Field Poll is accurate, but only up to a point. The majority of
blacks instinctively pull for the underdog, especially if the
underdog is poor and non-white. The majority of illegal immigrants
fit that bill, and much more. Many come from countries plagued by
civil war and economic destitution. They work jobs that pay scant
wages with minimal or non-existent labor protections. Blacks
suffered decades of Jim Crow segregation, violence and poverty. Many
liken the marches, rallies and political lobbying by immigrant
rights groups to the civil rights struggles of the 1960s. Then
there's the faint but fond memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s
Poor Peoples Campaign in 1968. The aim was to unite blacks, Latinos,
American Indians, and poor whites in a campaign for economic
justice. Against the opposition of some civil rights activists, King
actively courted Latino leaders.
Blacks also cringe at the thought that they could be perceived as
racial bigots. When pollsters ask blacks their opinions on issues
that deal with civil rights and racial justice, they reflexively
give the response that will cast them in the most favorable racial
light on these issues. Yet, like many whites, a significant number
of blacks privately express doubts, even animosity, toward illegal
immigrants.
The month before the results of the Field Poll were announced, a
poll by the Pew Research Center found that many blacks were hostile
toward illegal immigrants. The sore point with them was jobs. They
blamed illegal immigrants for worsening the dire plight of young,
poor African-American males. Recent studies by researchers at
Harvard, Columbia, and Princeton, and the Urban League's annual
State of Black America report confirm that black males suffer a
jobless rate double and triple that of white males in some urban
areas. Their unemployment numbers are also substantially higher than
those of Latino males. Some economists and employment studies finger
illegal immigration as a big cause of the economic slippage of low
and marginally skilled young black males. There is some evidence
that the poorest and least skilled blacks have lost jobs to illegal
immigrants.
But that job loss is not unique to blacks. Unskilled workers of all
ethnic groups, including white unskilled workers, lose jobs as the
number of unskilled laborers increases -- regardless of whether
those in the expanding pool of unskilled workers are illegal
immigrants or native-born.
Even if illegal immigration has little or no adverse economic impact
on the urban poor, many fervently believe that it does. When an
issue stirs intense passions and fears, belief can trump reality.
That's plainly evident in the blistering comments that many blacks
have made on black talk radio shows in recent weeks slamming illegal
immigrants. Some even implore blacks not to join immigrant rights
protests. Many of them cite the remark that Mexican President
Vicente Fox made last May in a speech in the seacoast town of Puerto
Vallarta. Fox praised Mexicans for their dignity and work ethic, and
their willingness to work the hardest, and dirtiest jobs in the
United States. But he then added that they worked jobs "that not
even blacks want to do." This impolitic gaffe at best was
insensitive, at worst racially demeaning. Many blacks were furious
at Fox and took the remark as evidence that Mexicans disdained
blacks.
While civil rights leaders and black Democrats now firmly support
illegal immigrants' rights, for a long time they were mute on the
issue. The Congressional Black Caucus opposed the Sensenbrenner bill
in the House last December. But it made little effort to expose the
punitive and draconian provisions of the bill, let alone inform and
engage blacks on how illegal immigration impacts their interests.
This sowed more doubt and confusion about illegal immigration among
blacks.
Still, the Field Poll and the demonstration at Congresswoman Waters'
office had one thing in common. It put black leaders squarely on the
same spot as the rest of the nation on illegal immigration: Deal
with it!
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