http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,143465,00.htmlCongress Split on White House Immigration Policy
Thursday, January 06, 2005
By Matt Hayes
Sensenbrenner now advocates most strongly for those who believe that immigration reform must be founded on borders that do what they are supposed to do. Most Americans would agree with him. When reports show that terror groups are beginning to favor the country's undermanned land borders and avoiding its ports, Americans are at precisely the same risks they faced in September of 2001.
If four million people enter the country illegally every year (as Sen. John McCain's office has found), then what can terrorists do?When the White House speaks of immigration reform, it always includes statements along the lines of "the system is broken," and "we should match every willing worker with every willing employer." To most Americans, this does not portend a country with functioning borders.
It represents the end of America's borders, and the abolition of a labor market in which American workers have any kind of bargaining power.No administration has ever proposed anything as radical as the president's "any willing worker" policy. If it becomes law, it will be the only immigration policy like it in the entire world.
In its current form, there would be no numerical limit on the number of foreign workers American business could import, and no minimum wage that employers would have to pay them.