Promise of mass deportations would hurt, not help, us all

Without immigrants, the US economy would be but a shadow of itself: No sustainable food production or delivery sector, no robust construction, millions of small businesses would not exist

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Editorials

November 7, 2024 - 2:02 PM

A dove sits on barbed wire along the border wall in Brownsville, Texas. (Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

Immigration and the 50 million people in this country who were foreign born have been an unfair target for both political parties in this election. America needs immigrants and the economy would fall apart without their work.

From talk of mass deportations to less extreme calls to secure the border, scapegoating newcomers is bipartisan, but politicians must be reminded that there is no greater long-term folly than shutting down what has historically been this country’s greatest strength.

There’s not one single reason why it makes sense to go to bat for immigrants, be they documented or otherwise. The reasons run along every track of our society, encompassing every other issue voters say matter to them — without immigrants, there would be nothing like what we understand to be the American economy.

There would be no sustainable food production and delivery sector, there would be no robust construction, millions of small businesses would not exist. 

We would have far fewer doctors and researchers and scientists and artists and academics, and be well behind both at the Nobel prizes and the Olympics. 

Immigrants are everywhere: the late mothers of both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris were both born elsewhere.

If even a fraction of the current foreign-born population suddenly left, social programs like Social Security would be careen towards insolvency as the workforce shrunk and the tax base collapsed. 

The effects wouldn’t just be felt in some diffuse national way; many individual cities and states would feel acute pain, reentering population spirals that immigration had staved off and having trouble funding municipal operations.

All these practical considerations are in addition to the clear moral barbarity of policies that would target either longtime undocumented immigrants or those seeking asylum at the border. 

In the former case, we challenge anyone to make a real, sensible argument for why someone who has lived and worked without incident in a place for 10 years or more, often with extensive family and social ties in the community and U.S. citizen spouses or children, should be deported. 

What is the benefit?

If there are any efforts to do this in New York City or elsewhere in our state, the resounding and unified response from our leadership should be: no way. 

We cannot cooperate with immigration enforcement authorities more than is strictly required. 

Our own identity and millions of actual New Yorkers are hanging in the balance, and we owe it to ourselves and each other to stand firm. No resources should go towards helping with misguided efforts.

Far better is to bring people into compliance with the law and regularize their status. 

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