
Arizona immigration protest (Creative Commons/SEIU International)
Cross-posted from In These Times
It’s not often that human rights and business profits line up on the same side of a political debate, but Alabama is a special place. The Cotton State was not only ground zero for some of the worst abuses under Jim Crow; it was also the flashpoint for early struggles that fused economic empowerment with civil rights, including the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Today, Alabama is once again a focal point for racial and class struggles, ignited by an anti-immigrant law that tests our definitions of economic citizenship in a world of fluid borders.
The law, HB 56, mirrors many of the “copycat” anti-immigrant bills that have gone viral in state legislatures from Arizona to Indiana. It would impose onerous identification requirements that encourage police to arrest and detain anyone who couldn’t present the right papers. Although some of the harsher provisions were blocked by a federal court earlier this year, the legislation (signed into law in June) still threatens to further demonize immigrants and to crystallize the racist ideology driving a two-tier economy, where the privileges of the elite are subsidized by the vicious exploitation of the 99 percent.
Sadly, if the law were only a matter of shamelessly scapegoating a group of vulnerable newcomers, the law might face considerably less opposition. But the debate reveals a convoluted class-based political calculus: employers contend that draconian anti-immigrant policies could cripple the economy.
They do have a point: Getting rid of the state’s undocumented population—2.5 percent of the state, according to the Center for American Progress–wouldn’t translate into more jobs for native-born workers or immigrants with green cards. It would likely shred the already-impoverished state’s balance sheet:
$40 million—A conservative estimate of how much Alabama’s economy would contract if only 10,000 undocumented immigrants stopped working in the state as a result of H.B. 56.
$130 million—The amount Alabama’s undocumented immigrants paid in taxes in 2010. These include state and local, income, property, and consumption taxes. This revenue would be lost if H.B. 56 were to do its job and drive all unauthorized immigrants from the state.
$300,000—The amount one farmer, Chad Smith of Smith Farms, estimates he has lost because of labor shortages in the wake of H.B. 56. Another farmer, Brian Cash of K&B Farm, estimates that he lost $100,000 in one single month because of the law.
This projected economic consequences (not to mention the cost of implementing and enforcing the law) would only exacerbate the state’s economic turmoil: nearly one in five in Alabama live in poverty and unemployment hovers well above the nationwide rate.
The impacts of HB 56 could span across immigrants’ communities, disrupting the education of their children and subjecting even workers with papers to mistreatement and discrimination by police as well as neighbors.
Even though economic anxieties are fueling the anti-immigrant crackdown, economic concerns also inform the widening opposition. Some pro-business advocates complain that the loss of migrant labor hurts their bottom line, often because others don’t step up to fill backbreaking jobs like tomato picking.
But here’s where the political landscape may slip dangerously in a direction that counters the very principles on which activists are fighting the law. Suddenly the case for a more lenient policy toward “illegal aliens” is not that they’re vital members of their families, communities, unions and workplaces, or that immigration agents shouldn’t be campaigning to tear apart families, or that everyone has a right to due process, or that democracy in a pluralistic society hinges on equality before the law. If you listen to the bosses with whom civil rights groups have formed an uneasy alliance, HB 56 is bad for Alabama not so much because it criminalizes people who want nothing more than to make a living for themselves, free of the oppression of an arbitrary and dysfunctional legal regime.
Instead, it’s harmful because it’s bad for business.
But while the strange-bedfellows strategy may be politically expedient, the opposition to Alabama’s anti-immigrant law can’t be centered on a narrow calculus that elevates capital above human rights. The Obama administration, too, has challenged immigration policies in Alabama and Arizona on anti-discrimination grounds, but overall, the White House has perpetuated the rampant abuses that plague the federal detention and deportation system.
And the deeper labor issues manifested by the immigration crisis wouldn’t go away if the law were defeated: there would still be no national discussion on combating wage theft, human trafficking, and restrictions on the right to organize–problems that affect native-born and immigrants alike.
Marisa Franco of the National Day Labor Organizing Network told In These Times:
Workers are increasingly facing situations where their bosses and even customers or clients feel the authority to threaten and harass with little recourse of justice. When local police take a mandate to enforce federal immigration laws, employers have a powerful tool to undermine hard won labor protections. Its a threat to all workers and the fundamental right to organize.
The only way to reorient the dialogue toward rights and away from profits is to help workers and organized labor understand that the zero-sum game of “competition” for the most degrading jobs keeps the economically disenfranchised divided along false lines of “legal” versus “illegal.”
For now, activists may form strategic alliances to fight anti-immigrant bills like Alabama’s. But if they let bosses and big business frame the debate going forward, they’ll lose the real battle—for economic justice for all.



6 Comments

The law, HB 56, mirrors many of the “copycat” anti-immigrant bills that have gone viral in state legislatures from Arizona to Indiana. It would impose onerous identification requirements that encourage police to arrest and detain anyone who couldn’t present the right papers.
Yes the police can pick up anyone but they will mostly target brown people. If I forget my ID and get stopped for a traffic ticket I get held for INS. Non hispanic Americans I bet will not be turned over to INS.
Immigrants should be safe from hatred and racism but I don’t care if Alabama goes completely bankrupt. The people who have the money should pay the price for their bigotry and I say let’s the crops rot in the fields.
Exactly, Twain. I have lived here in Oaxaca in Southern Mexico for the past almost 4 years. A beautiful colonial city full of artists and artisans.
Lately I have met many Mexicans who had lived in the states for between 15 and 20 or more years. Some were born there. But they have come ‘home’ and are perfectly happy here with their families and finding good jobs.
Unlike the treatment that they experienced lately in the states, Mexicans here are nothing but friendly, kind, thoughtful, welcoming and generous to me and all expats. I am embarrassed at the way these decent people were treated by my country.
The states does not deserve to have them.
When enough Mexicans and Central Americans have left for their absence to be felt, it will be nothing less than those bigots deserve.
And it will give me great satisfaction when they realize that those people they have been so cruel to were merely scapegoats and their economy is worse than ever.
Of course, what the plan has obviously been all along from the Oligarchy is to reinstate prison labor. Poor brown and black men who have been caught up in this insidious War on Drugs will now become the slave labor force.
Am I ever glad to be gone from that nasty country. Come on down to live here anytime. Find some job that you can do over the internet and leave America to its miserable self.
Whenever I leave California, I take my passport with me. Even in the big island of America. Scary. I am as white and as boring as tapioca pudding at room temperature–but ya never know now, do you?
INS Officer: “OK, where are you from??”
Me: “Tahiti”
Alabama is not “again’ ground zero for civil rights. It’s never stopped being front and center – it’s just that people got distracted.
Prejudiced? Hardly. I’m an Alabama expatriate who covered Civil rights in the 60s as a genuine jour no and left in 1973. I still have family there but I try not to ever go there other than funerals. I send my regards for the brides.
The pretense there is that things have changed. List to what I’ve listened to for 50 years and you find that it’s just the outside that’s changed. The inside is not pint, but black and white no matter where you look.
Alabama is a disgrace, as I am entitled to say, and the best thing to be said about it other than natural beauty, etc. is that it still has rivals for the worst state in the union. Hey, but it’s cheap for retirees, but take a guess whey this retiree isn’t going near the place.