Now begins the latest chapter in our new president's dissembling.
Before cheering crowds in Florida last weekend, President Trump declared his resolve to deport "gang members — bad, bad people." But in the crowded basement of my church in Minneapolis last Sunday, tearful women worried that their children will return to empty apartments, effectively orphaned by our president's pledge to deport anyone who is in the U.S. without the proper papers except those brought here as children.
No matter that many of those children's parents have been here for 10-20-30 years, working hard, buying cars and houses, paying taxes without receiving benefits, and contributing in countless ways to our churches, schools, businesses and neighborhoods. Under the Executive Orders on Protecting the Homeland released Tuesday, no one is exempt. Anyone in the country illegally is declared a "removable alien."
These "removable aliens" — language that makes people sound both rubbishy and extraterrestrial — are not the people I know. I know cleaning women and roofers, car mechanics and cooks who were born in Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala. Some were drawn to the U.S. by the promise of jobs or hopes of going to college. Some fled here out of fear or desperation, because gangs threatened their children or because they could not feed them.
If there had been any possibility of becoming U.S. citizens, they'd have grabbed it. But it's been 30 years since Congress last created a pathway for undocumented workers to become citizens. That fix hasn't stopped the flow — the number of undocumented workers has more than doubled since 1986 — because of patchy enforcement and higher-than-expected employer demand for immigrant labor. But rounding up millions of people and deporting them without giving them a chance to see a lawyer or call their children is neither practical nor humane.
Consider these facts: An estimated 11 million people are in this country illegally, a number staggering in size and heartbreaking in its potential for broken lives. Some 8 million of them are working, threatening massive disruptions in many workplaces if they are deported.
In 2012, illegal immigrants were 3.5 percent of the U.S. population (1.8 percent in Minnesota) and 5.1 percent of the nation's labor force (2.5 percent in Minnesota). Immigrant men are more likely to be in the labor force than native-born men (91 to 76 percent). Undocumented immigrant women are more likely to have young children at home, 22 percent compared to 7 percent, than native-born Americans.
Most of Trump's "removable aliens" are workers and mothers, not "bad, bad men."