Trump has recognized that undocumented immigrants are important for several industries and has backed off arresting and deporting them.
That's what he's
said. I'm not sure that's actually happening. It's a matter of time before his own
Einsatzgruppenfuhrer Stephen Miller throws a tantrum and demands 4,000 - no, 5000 people rounded up and deported daily.
I would argue that there are a lot more industries that need these workers to operate effectively.
Indeed, in the agricultural sector, it's not just harvesting but also processing. Some of the work at meat processing plants, for example, is back-breaking and extremely dangerous. They risk severe injury and even death on a regular basis. You're never going to convince me that people born here in the U. S. and who've either done service work or the trades is going to give up their job to go work in a meat processing facility or harvesting in 100+ degree heat.
It's not just agriculture, though. Immigrant labor is crucial for everything from restaurants to lawn & landscaping to stocking grocery stores. Without immigrant labor, which almost certainly includes undocumented workers, these businesses don't just suffer decline; they collapse and go out of business - overnight. There's nobody to do their work. There are probably places in the U.S. where that's not true, but that's only because migrants haven't settled there. Anywhere you have larger populations and demographic diversity, migrant labor is a crucial backbone to many sectors of the economy.
Those immigrants who haven't committed crimes and are productively employed - should they be allowed to remain and given a path to citizenship?
Yes and no. I guess this gets into a semantic debate about what
path really means.
This is one area where I'm somewhat of a centrist/pragmatist. I don't think they should be allowed to violate immigration laws without at least some consequences; otherwise, we just encourage more mass migration, and we do have borders and immigration laws for a reason - every nation does.
But I think we could set up a multi-pronged approach whereby maybe they voluntarily self-report their lack of status and then start a process of review and compliance. I just wonder how many would truly be interested in that, though. I think the reason many arrive without documents is that the process is long, bureaucratic, and expensive, and they don't have the resources or the time to wait.
I kind of feel like the better path would be to make legal immigration a lot more flexible, but we live in the post 9/11 world and everyone's afraid of being blamed for the next domestic crisis caused by
furriners.