Bill
Clinton Laid the Groundwork for Trump’s Ugly
Immigration Policies
By Bill Blum
“Men make their own history, but they do
not make it as they please; they do not
make it under self-selected
circumstances, but under circumstances
existing already, given and transmitted
from the past. The tradition of all dead
generations weighs like a nightmare on
the brains of the living.”
—Karl
Marx, “The 18th Brumaire of Louis Napoleon”
(1851-52)
April
02, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "TruthDig"
-
The most cruel,
divisive and dangerous policies adopted thus far
by the administration of President Donald John
Trump are those embodied in the
executive orders
(EOs) he has signed into law in the areas of
immigration, terrorism and border security.
They’re so cruel, indeed, that many
influential commentators
have fostered the narrative that they are
unprecedented.
Yet
they are not. In both the larger historical
context and the smaller scope of the recent
past, they fall well within the boundaries of
America’s deep-seated nativist traditions.
Trump
isn’t the first chief executive to tap into
those traditions. His policies haven’t sprung
from thin air. From the Alien and Sedition Acts
of 1798 to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882,
the “red scares” of the 20th century, the
“Operation Wetback” mass deportations of the
Eisenhower administration, and the deportation
records set by President Obama, our immigration
laws and policies in good measure have been
driven by political expediency, paranoia,
scapegoating, racism and economic exploitation.
But while
Trump’s programs fit nicely into the broad sweep
of our nativist legacy, they also owe a specific
debt to legislation enacted during the tenure of
none other than President William Jefferson
Clinton.
Yes,
you read that right. Much that is repugnant and
regressive in Trump’s EOs—the ballyhooed
southern wall, the expansion of the border
patrol, the mass detentions and “expedited”
removals of the undocumented and “criminal
aliens,” the deployment of local police to
enforce immigration laws, even the violation of
international standards governing the treatment
of refugees—can be traced back to the statutory
framework constructed during the Clinton era.
The “great triangulator” didn’t just fuel an
already existing trend toward mass incarceration
with the enactment of the
Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act
of 1994, or add to the miseries of the poor by
upending the welfare system with the passage of
the
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Reconciliation Act
of 1996. He also left a stain in the field of
immigration.
In his Jan. 23, 1996,
State of the Union address,
Clinton stressed the need for tough federal
action on illegal immigration. “After years of
neglect,” he declared, “this administration has
taken a strong stand to stiffen the protection
of our borders. We are increasing border
controls by 50 percent. We are increasing
inspections to prevent the hiring of illegal
immigrants. And tonight, I announce I will sign
an executive order to deny federal contracts to
businesses that hire illegal immigrants.”
In short order, he went far beyond the hiring
ban, signing into law two pieces of omnibus
legislation that paved the way for Trump’s
current nativist agenda: the
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act
(AEDPA), enacted in April 1996; and the
Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant
Responsibility Act
(IIRIRA), which passed in September of the same
year.
Together, the two acts (along with a few smaller
bills) combined to do the following:
Expand the Definition of Criminal Immigrants
Subject to Deportation
Prior to 1996, immigrants were subject to
deportation following state or federal
convictions for murder, rape and other serious
felonies. The AEDPA added
17 “aggravated felonies”
to the list, including theft, counterfeiting and
receiving stolen property in cases involving
terms of imprisonment of five years or more.
Under the IIRIRA, the term of imprisonment
needed to render theft and forgery offenses as
grounds for deportation was reduced to one year,
including probationary sentences.
The net
effect of the changes was to vastly expand the
number of immigrants, both documented and
undocumented, subject to removal from the
country. Trump’s EOs build on the AEDPA and
IIRIRA by targeting for removal undocumented
immigrants either convicted of, or simply
charged with, any criminal offenses.
Mandatory Detention
Along with broadening the definition of
deportable crimes, the 1996 acts called for the
mandatory detention of immigrants convicted of
aggravated felonies pending their removal. As a
result, the average daily number of immigrants
held in detention centers skyrocketed from 6,785
in 1994 to 19,458 by the time
Clinton left office.
Many were held in private, for-profit
facilities.
Today, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
holds some
34,000 immigrants per day
in custody, many in privately run jails. That
number, according to the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS), will
jump to 80,000 under Trump’s plans.
Ending Traditional Deportation Hearings and
Instituting Expedited Removal
The
IIRIRA did away with traditional deportation
hearings, replacing them with “removal”
proceedings. The change was by no means
semantic. Along with the revised nomenclature,
under the new law, immigrants were accorded
fewer procedural rights.
Among
other changes, the IIRIRA eliminated an
often-invoked defense known as “suspension of
deportation,” which permitted immigrants to seek
deportation relief if they had been physically
present in the U.S. for at least seven years,
were of “good moral character” and were
conviction-free for such period, and could
demonstrate that they or their family members
(if lawfully present) would suffer extreme
hardship if they were deported.
The IIRIRA replaced the suspension remedy with
“cancellation of removal,” a form of
discretionary relief that requires immigrants to
meet the very stringent bar of proving 10 years
of continuous presence and establishing that
their expulsion would cause “exceptional and
extremely unusual hardship” to a qualifying U.S.
spouse or child. Hardship to immigrant
applicants themselves was
eliminated as no longer relevant.
The number of cancellation grants, moreover, was
capped at
3,000 per year.
Those who didn’t qualify were barred from
seeking lawful admission to the U.S. for either
three or 10 years, depending on how long they
had been illegally in the country.
Even more importantly, the IIRIRA instituted the
dreaded process of “expedited removal.” Under
the program, immigration agents were empowered
to expel immigrants, without even bringing them
before an immigration judge for a hearing, if
they could not show that they had been in the
country
for two years.
In practice, until Trump, expedited removals
without hearings were largely reserved for
immigrants apprehended within 100 miles of the
border within 14 days of entry. Others were
“caught and released” into the community pending
their hearings. Trump’s EOs vow to end catch and
release and apply the tools of expedited removal
nationwide to the letter of the Clinton-era law
to anyone who crosses the border
within the previous two years.
Fortifying the Border Patrol and Building a
Deportation Force
To
deliver on his promises of mass deportations,
Trump has advocated the hiring of 5,000
additional Border Patrol agents and 10,000 more
immigration officers in the nation’s interior.
Far from being outliers, both demands are in
keeping with historical trends. Among its myriad
provisions, the IIRIRA authorized a sharp
increase in the number of Border Patrol
personnel, which doubled in size between 1996
and the 9/11 attacks, and
have doubled again since 9/11.
Partnering with Local Governments and Punishing
Sanctuary Cities
In
addition to beefing up the Border Patrol and
ICE, Trump’s EOs call for a rapid expansion of
the “287(g) program” (named after a provision of
federal law) aimed at deputizing local and state
police agencies to serve as quasi-immigration
agents in the apprehension of undocumented
immigrants. The EOs also threaten crackdowns on
so-called “sanctuary cities” that refuse to
partner with immigration authorities by denying
such jurisdictions federal grants and funding.
The 287(g) program—you guessed it—was added to
the books by a
provision of the IIRIRA.
Refugee Violations
While there is nothing in the legislation signed
by Clinton that approaches Trump’s two “Muslim
bans” (which to date have been derailed by the
courts), Clinton took executive actions to
suspend entry into the U.S. of designated
classes of people from several nations,
including
Zaire, Nigeria, Bosnia and Serbia, Sudan, Angola
and Sierra Leone.
Both George W. Bush and Barack Obama did the
same.
More generally, according to
Human Rights Watch,
the IIRIRA ran afoul of the U.N. Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees by making it
impossible for any immigrant convicted of an
aggravated felony to obtain protection from a
return to persecution. Even relatively minor
drug and theft offenders with sentences of one
year or more can be sent to persecution by U.S.
immigration authorities. International
standards, by contrast, limit such returns to
those convicted of serious crimes and who would
constitute a danger to the community.
The
Southern Border Wall
Trump’s
EOs also could make good on his campaign
promises to erect “a great and beautiful wall”
along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border.
Here,
too, the promises, while financially exorbitant
and diplomatically disastrous, find firm footing
in past practices.
In 1990, a 14-mile, triple-deep fence was
constructed in San Diego.
In 1996, the IIRIRA authorized the federal
government to build additional barriers. And in
2006, the Secure Fence Act was passed,
authorizing completion of still more. Today,
there are 700 miles of fencing along the
southern border.
Among those voting in favor of the Secure Fence
Act was Hillary Clinton, then the
junior Democratic Senator from New York.
Among those voting against was Bernie Sanders,
then a member of the House of Representatives
from Vermont.
Understanding the full political, social and
legal underpinnings of Trump’s xenophobic
immigration proposals is the key to defeating
them. It isn’t sufficient—nor is it factually
accurate, as this look back at the ugly legacy
of Bill Clinton shows—to brand them as
unprecedented or an aberration.
To combat and ultimately destroy Trumpism, we
can’t return to Clinton-style neoliberalism.
When it comes to immigration, we have to promote
a progressive approach that, as advocacy groups
like
America’s Voice
suggest, emphasizes a direct, fair and inclusive
road to citizenship for immigrants, fair labor
standards for all working people on both sides
of the border, stringent environmental
protections, equitable international trade
agreements and law enforcement practices that
recognize and protect immigrants’ rights.
It’s
time to come together for the battles ahead.
Bill
Blum is a former judge and death penalty defense
attorney. He is the author of three legal
thrillers published by Penguin/Putnam
(“Prejudicial Error,” “The Last Appeal” and “The
Face of Justice”) and is a contributing writer
for California Lawyer magazine. His nonfiction
work has appeared in such publications as
Crawdaddy magazine, In These Times, The Nation,
The Progressive, the ABA Journal, the Orange
County Register, the San Jose Mercury News, the
Los Angeles Times, LA Weekly and Los Angeles
magazine.
@BlumsLaw
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.
See
also
Flashback 2006: Senators
Clinton and Obama Vote for Secure Fence Act:
The Secure Fence Act of 2006’s goal is to help
secure America’s borders, and security threats
by building 700 miles (1,100 km) of physical
barriers along the Mexico-United States border.