The Missing Immigration Debate

by: Esther J. Cepeda, Op-Ed

The Missing Immigration Debate
Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance at an immigration rally in Los Angeles on May 1, 2010. (Photo: Ray_from_LA)

Chicago - If I were a member of the third largest minority group in the United States, I'd be really frustrated that the immigration issue continues to be discussed almost exclusively with Latin Americans in mind.

As immigrants' rights advocacy groups across the country wonder whether there's even a slim chance Congress will take up debate about comprehensive reform anytime soon, recent national conversations have been set exclusively in the context of the Latino vote and Republican Hispanics.

Despite President Obama's failure so far to deliver on his campaign promise to shepherd through meaningful reforms, Latinos turned out to help Democrats hold a few hotly contested seats. Paradoxically, Hispanics also boosted the Republican Party by helping elect several high-profile Latinos who had few ideas for solving our current illegal immigration woes and instead campaigned on tighter border controls and stepped-up enforcement.

This Latino-centric immigration narrative, while reflective of the population and a key to Hispanic political empowerment, excludes many who also have a stake in this debate.

"It is really frustrating to be mostly left out of the conversation," said Karen Narasaki, president and executive director of the Asian American Justice Center, which advocates for the rights and interests of the Asian-American and Pacific Islander communities. "Mostly it's because the Asian-American vote is missing -- the media do not sample the Asian vote to tell what we're really voting on."

Compared to the 9 percent of eligible voters who are Latino, Narasaki estimated the Asian vote represents about 5 percent of eligible voters.

"That '5 percent nationally' gets lost because we're heavily concentrated on the West Coast, New York, and in California, which has the largest Asian population," Narasaki told me. "We believe we contributed probably 6 to 7 percent of the vote in Sen. (Barbara) Boxer's race. In Las Vegas, where we're one of the nation's fastest growing populations, (Senate Majority Leader Harry) Reid courted the Asian vote and got it. These are working-class Asians who got together for him but we get lumped into the category of 'other immigrant voters.'"

Census and other studies have put the number of all illegal immigrants in the U.S. at approximately 12 million. About 1.5 million are Asians -- representing 12 percent of the total Asian population -- with 23 percent estimated to be Chinese, 17 percent Filipino, 14 percent Indian, 11 percent Koreans and the balance from a variety of smaller countries, all with different issues.

For instance, huge backlogs exist in families where immigrant citizens or legal permanent residents can bring spouses, parents and minor children from overseas. Their wait times are heartbreaking. The longest is for Filipinos, Narasaki said -- they currently must wait about 19 years to reunite with family members. Chinese and Indians face up to nine-year waits.

Then there are the concerns of refugees from Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Burma who are wary about strict filing deadlines for asylum claims and crackdowns on deportations for minor criminal offenses.

Indians -- a highly skilled subgroup of Asians who tend to come into the U.S. on H1B visas -- are, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the fastest-growing group of illegal immigrants. But if they lose a job, they have a limited window, sometimes only days, in which to find another before losing their legal status. In such a difficult housing market, homeowning Indians and their U.S.-born children are choosing to stay illegally.

All this makes Asians a mystery to the political parties in which they must gain a foothold to influence immigration reform and other priorities. "The parties have under-invested in us," Narasaki said. "The Republicans think that because Asians are a minority they must be Democrats and the Democrats think that because Asians are business people, they must be Republicans." Though a 2006 exit poll showed 79 percent of Asian-Americans voted Democratic, she added: "In the Asian-American community a lot of the vote is up for grabs -- depending on the region there's a lot of independence."

We need diverse Asian and other viewpoints in the national conversation about voting blocs and how to deal with immigration law reform. Their experiences are exactly what voters and elected officials need in order to get past their preconceived notions of who would benefit from an overhaul of our current system.

Esther Cepeda's e-mail address is estherjcepeda(at)washpost.com.

(c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group 

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Esther J. Cepeda is a member of the Washington Post Writers Group and a former blogger for the Huffington Post.  


Comments

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Liar. There is no wait to

Liar. There is no wait to bring spouses and minor children to the USA.

There is a wait for parents, buy why should any be allowed. Most are elderly, so five years after arrival they become citizens to collect Medicaid, food stamps and Social Security disability without having worked a day in the USA.

There is a debate in the USA, its why neither party will help poor unemployed American minorities by deporting the 29 million illegals. The Feds refuse to deport them until they commit a felony.



Why does this gal hate

Why does this gal hate unemployed Americans? Why should we care about foreign workers whose visas expire? That opens jobs for Americans.

Yes, pull this BS article. There is no wait for spouses and children. She talks about adult brothers and sisters and parents, who we don't want or need. If they want to reunite with their larger family, GO HOME.



People need to rethink

People need to rethink immigration on BOTH sides--it drains these countries of their most valuable resources--it really has the effect of genocide on these countries, so they can continually be subservient to us. Why do our corporations not pay these people what their time and resources are valued OVER THERE? This strategy with the US gov is to maintain control at any cost. The US prob has sufficient population for our needs--the big immigration is to dilute US labor and to harm other countries.



Name any country in the

Name any country in the world who would allow immigrants to become citizens unless they arrived legally?

Heart breaking? How about cities and states in debt from crime and high immigration costs?

How about the companies firing local workers for cheaper illegal ones? Any sympathy for those laid off workers? The illegals work for slave labor and are abused. No one wins in this case.

Where we lived in the NW burbs of Chicago the church was bringing in "immigrant workers and their parents". They were Asians not Hispanics. They lived in our subdivision...a whole group of them.

The abuse of church immigration and anchor babies has everyone justly upset.

I'd say there are more than 30 million illegal workers in the US since the last amnesty.