By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, June 12, 2024
For more than 20 years, I have held one position constant
when it comes to immigration policy: We should have one.
I am less concerned about the number of immigrants we
take in every year than I am about the fact that we—voters, policymakers,
politicians, what have you—pick a number.
I’d be fine with 1 million or 2 million immigrants a
year. I’d also be fine with a temporary freeze on most immigration. I think
preferences for skilled immigrants are entirely defensible. I also think a
generous asylum policy is morally preferable to a narrow one.
But for me, the priority isn’t the number or kind of
immigrants we take in; it’s making a decision about the number and kind and
sticking to it.
If the number is too high or low, policymakers can change
it. If they don’t change it, voters can elect a politician or party who will.
But if Congress says the number is 1 million per year, that should be the
actual number.
The late Democratic Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas, who
chaired the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform in the 1990s, put it
succinctly: “The credibility of immigration policy can be measured by a simple
yardstick: People who should get in, do get in; people who should not get in
are kept out; and people who are judged deportable are required to leave.”
Credibility is important for any government endeavor, but
it’s especially so for immigration because few issues share its capacity to sow
public discontent. The sense that immigration is “out of control” breeds
distrust, incites nativism, and fuels panic and conspiracy theories.
It was ever thus. In colonial America, Benjamin Franklin
repeatedly warned of the danger posed by unchecked German immigration, worrying
that “they
will soon so out number us, that … we … will not in my opinion be able to
preserve our language, and even our government will become precarious.” In
1798, Congress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts, which are remembered for
their assault on free speech but were driven by the fear that French and other
immigrants (i.e., Aliens) were an enemy within. The Naturalization Act—part of
the Alien and Sedition Acts—made it harder for immigrants to become citizens
and vote.
Later chapters in this old story include the
Know-Nothings, all manner of panic over the Irish, the Yellow Peril, and of
course “replacement theory.” The same sentiments are now driving the surging
prospects of far-right
parties in Europe and the domestic success of Donald Trump despite—or
because of—all his ugly rhetoric about “vermin” and blood “poisoning.”
That’s why President Joe Biden’s ham-fisted mishandling
of the border crisis is arguably his greatest liability after his age. Indeed,
I would argue that the former informs attitudes about the latter, in that the
impression of lawlessness at the border fuels the sense that he is weak and
overwhelmed.
As Europe’s travails demonstrate, this is not just an
American problem. Large-scale immigration roils politics and society everywhere
it occurs.
Moreover, despite America’s struggles with immigration
past and present, this country is not anti-immigrant. As of 2022, the United
States had roughly 46 million foreign-born residents, more than half of them
citizens, accounting for about 14
percent of the population. (China’s immigrants, by contrast, amount to
about 0.04
percent of its population.) There is no country in the world better at
absorbing and assimilating people, and we should take deep patriotic pride in
that.
That’s important to bear in mind because the rhetoric on
both sides of the debate makes restoring credibility to our immigration system
harder. Contrary to Pat Buchanan’s dire prophecies, Mexican Americans have not
shown much interest in a “Reconquista” of the American Southwest. And
notwithstanding the constant shrieks about America’s nativism and xenophobia,
the melting pot continues to burble along.
As a rule, normal Americans are far more sensible and
decent on this issue than our leaders. It’s a sign that the loudest voices on
both sides are detached from reality that increasingly large numbers of Latinos
want stronger enforcement of the border and immigration laws. Indeed, if Trump
wins this year’s election, it will be partly because working-class Latinos have
assimilated into the culture and politics of the rest of the American working
class.
The editorial stance of the National Review,
where I worked for two decades, was always that if responsible politicians
don’t deal with immigration responsibly, irresponsible ones will exploit the
issue to get elected. If the 2016 election wasn’t enough to prove that, 2024
might be.
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