Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) may only be the vice presidential nominee on the Democrat ticket, but she is already promising that a “Harris administration with Joe Biden” will be a boon to voters.
The California lawmaker, whom the former vice president said he chose as his running mate last month because of her readiness “to lead on day one ,” told a group of Latino small business owners from Arizona on Saturday that it was vital they made the right choice this November.
“As part of our Build Back Better agenda, we will need to make sure you have a president in the White House who actually sees you, who understands your needs, who understands the dignity of your work, and who has your back,” Harris said in a five-minute virtual address to the group, according to the Arizona Republic .
“A Harris administration together with Joe Biden as the president of the United States, the Biden-Haris administration will provide access to 100 billion dollars in low-interest loans and investments for minority-business owners,” she added:
ABC News / Facebook Harris’ remarks come as some Democrat strategists continue to express concerns over Biden’s fitness and stamina for the presidency. Since jumping into the 2020 race, the former vice president has flummoxed many with his frequent gaffes and misstatements on the campaign trail.
The issue came to a head last week when a one-time White House stenographer, who worked exclusively with Biden during the Obama administration, told the Washington Free Beacon that the former vice president had deteriorated since leaving office.
“It is a complete difference from what he was in 2017,” the stenographer said. “He’s lost a step and he doesn’t seem to have the same mental acuity as he did four years ago.”
“He doesn’t have the energy, he doesn’t have the pace of his speaking,” they added. “He’s a different guy.
Joe
Biden Promises to Let Mayors Import Foreign Workers
Justin
Sullivan/Getty Images
10 Sep
2020280
10:20
If Joe Biden is elected president, mayors and county executives
will get a pipeline of foreign workers for local CEOs who say they cannot
recruit Americans for the jobs, says Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign platform.
“It is the Democratic version of [President] George W. Bush’s
[2004] ‘ Willing
worker, willing employer’ proposal,”
said Mark Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies. The Bush
proposal, he said, would have allowed:
Any employer to import any number of workers from anywhere in
the world to do any job at any wage above minimum wage. What Biden wants to do
… is to give city and county governments the ability to import people and then
give them to the employers.
In exchange, Krikorian said, “the [employers] would express
their gratitude with donations and consulting contracts for the [politicians’]
cocaine-addicted sons.”
Biden’s local migration plan is described in his immigration platform titled, “The Biden Plan for Securing Our Values as a
Nation of Immigrants”:
As president, Biden will support a program to allow any county
or municipal executive of a large or midsize county or city to petition for
additional immigrant visas to support the region’s economic development
strategy, provided employers in those regions certify there are available jobs,
and that there are no workers to fill them. Holders of these visas would be
required to work and reside in the city or county that petitioned for them.
The imported workers would not be legal immigrants, according to
the plan. They would be visa workers who likely could eventually apply for
green cards, presumably if they have earned the approval or CEOs or mayors.
Even without approval from Congress, the plan is doable because
it builds on the existing pipelines of foreign workers.
For example, both presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama
cited section
1324a of the 1965 immigration law to
create and expand the Practical Training pipeline, which provided work permits
to roughly 500,000 foreign graduates of U.S. colleges in 2019. In contrast,
President Donald Trump has
trimmed the program.
Obama used the same 1324a claim to bypass Congress, as he
provided work permits to at least 800,000 younger illegal immigrants under the
so-called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.
For more than a decade, lower courts have ping-ponged two
lawsuits by the Immigration Reform Law Institute challenging the 1324a claim.
The Supreme Court declined to address the legality of the 1324a claim when it
rejected President Donald Trump’s effort to cancel the program.
Also, Congress has declined to block the work permit programs,
and in 2019, apparently affirmed a “ Parole
in Place ” presidential authority that could
be cited in presidential amnesties.
Moreover, there is no annual limit on the number of foreign
temporary workers who can be nominated for green cards. This means that Fortune
500 CEOs can import short-term workers and then extend their stay by nominating
them for green cards. Many CEOs prefer indentured workers because they are
unable to leave their employers until they get their green cards, perhaps after
a decade of compliant work.
The Biden program is pitched as a stimulus for interior states
who have been left behind as Congress’s immigration programs deliver millions
of new workers and trillions of dollars in new wealth to coastal investors,
states, regions, and counties.
Biden’s plan says the new pipeline would:
…allow cities and counties to petition for higher levels of
immigrants to support their growth. The disparity in economic growth between
U.S. cities, and between rural communities and urban areas, is one of the great
imbalances of today’s economy. Some cities and many rural communities struggle
with shrinking populations, an erosion of economic opportunity, and local
businesses that face unique challenges. Others simply struggle to attract a
productive workforce and innovative entrepreneurs.
The language in Biden’s plan echoes the pitch by the
investor-created Economic Innovation Group , which is lobbying legislators to back a new immigration
program dubbed the “Heartland Visa.” The group’s pitch says that “A place-based
visa program would allow mutually-advantageous matches to be made between
skilled immigrants and places wishing to attract more human capital.”
The group sold its idea to the New
York Times , Pete
Buttigieg , and others. Buttigieg’s
2020 vision , titled, “Investing in an American asset: Unleashing the
Potential of Rural America,” said:
Pete will create a new, place-based Community Renewal visa to
provide opportunities for people who want to move to America and help build our
economy where they are needed most and where they will do well. These visas
will be targeted toward counties that have lost prime-working-age population
over the last 10 years, and smaller cities that are struggling to keep pace
economically with larger cities.
The EIG is run by wealthy investors who would gain from any increased inflow of cheap workers,
consumers, renters, and home-buyers — especially if the immigrants needed
federal aid. The group is particularly interested in raising real estate
prices, saying , “The relationship between population growth and housing demand
is clear. More people means more demand for housing, and fewer people means
less demand.”
The EIG group did not respond to emails from Breitbart News.
Immigration shifts wealth from wages to
stocks, from young to old, from central states to the coasts, from the many to
the few.
Yes, migrants get huge relative gains in pay & civic life by moving into
US.
But investors skim the $$ from the diversity #H1B https://t.co/PVA75K3v9T
— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) August
21, 2020
The EIG plan would flood local labor markets and make it
difficult for American workers — especially marginalized
workers — to argue for good jobs and
decent wages.
Biden’s plan is a “terrible idea for a whole bunch of reasons,”
said Krikorian.
The program would create a local laborforce of indentured
migrant workers, who would be stuck in the district until they eventually get
green cards, said Krikorian. “The indentured side of it is appalling …
Are they going to send ‘immigrant chasers’ after them as they move to the next
town?”
The plan would encourage corrupt deals with employers, he said.
“When politicians have authority over importing visas, businesses have a
real interest in currying favor with those guys — the certainty of
corruption will be the subject of news stories as long as this kind of
thing lasts,” he said.
The plan is bad for local government because the easy
alternative of cheap foreign workers will make it difficult for local
officials, citizens, and executives to make difficult resource decisions about
education and infrastructure spending, said Krikorian:
Businesses and local governments would no longer have an
incentive to make the hard choices about investing in community college,
training programs … they won’t have to. They’ll just call up their Congressman,
and order up a bunch of foreign workers.
EIG’s “place-based visa plan” won’t help the places that hope
for foreign redemption, said John Miano, a lawyer with the Immigraiton Reform
Law Institute. “It will never work — people will just move to where they want
to go,” which is usually close to similar people, usually in coastal states, he
said. But that movement would be no problem for the EIG investors who have ties
to many companies around the nation, he said.
By allowing politicians to deliver short-term workers to
cooperative CEOs, the Biden plan would dramatically increase government power
over the CEOs, Krikorian said. But that is not a problem for business advocates
of immigration, he said:
Their goal is maximizing immigration regardless of how it
happens. Yes, they would prefer it happened in a libertarian-ish fashion the
way George W Bush offered, where the government was not involved, but they’ll
settle for Biden’s version. It increases the number of people moving here
because that is the goal.
The better alternative to more visa-worker migration would be to
reduce the distorting impact of the federal government’s cheap-labor
immigration policy, say reformers.
For example, CEOs will move their coastal jobs to cheaper
U.S. locations if they have to pay fair-market pay rates, Miano said. “If you
cut off H-1B visas, there will be a rush of coastal jobs to Kansas, Montana,
and those kinds of places,” he said.
Trump’s 2020 platform promises
to end cheap labor replacement of
American employees.
“The solution has always been to tighten up the labor
market,” said Kevin Lynn, founder of U.S. Tech Workers. “We’ve seen it in the
[Trump-enforced] exit of J-1s [visa workers] — when all of a sudden, job opportunities
are created for college students.”
“It is a virtuous circle when you tighten the labor market,” he
said.
The inflow of immigrants and visa workers has changed the
nation’s workplaces, economy, and labor force.
For example, the H-1B visa pipeline delivers roughly 100,000
foreign graduates to CEOs each year. Most of those H-1B workers are hoping to
get green cards from their CEOs, so they are willing to work long hours,
without complaint, for lower salaries, for many years, in the so-called Green
Card Economy.
The H-1B program is just one of several programs that provide
CEOs with a workforce of at least 1 million indentured foreign
graduates who have few legal rights to demand higher wages, to complain to a
federal agency, or to testify in court.
This huge population of foreign graduates reduces nationwide
pressure for pay raises, reduces gateway jobs for young American graduates,
reduce the workplace status of American professionals, reduces turnover and
innovation in the tech sector, and reduces the creation of new companies that
threaten the tech CEOs’ control over their technology.
Biden’s 2020 plan includes several other proposals to expand the inflow fo
workers and consumers into the United States.
He promises to let companies import more
visa workers , to accelerate the inflow of chain-migration
migrants , to suspend immigration enforcement
against illegals, and to dramatically increase the inflow of poor refugees.
Donald Trump's labor & immigration
promises for a 2nd term are vague but useful.
They are also better for ordinary Americans than Joe Biden's business-backed,
open-ended inflow of wage-cutting & rent-raising blue-collar workers &
college-graduates. https://t.co/OmE4tRPf4T
— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) August
26, 2020
Joe Biden’s Immigration
Plan to Accelerate Chain Migration Inflow
Drew Angerer/Getty
1 Sep 2020 204
4:19
Democrat Joe Biden’s immigration plan contains hard-to-see
policy changes that would dramatically accelerate the inflow of roughly four
million chain migrants.
Biden’s promise is included in his 6,600 immigration platform , titled, “The Biden Plan for Securing Our Values as a Nation of
Immigrants.” The document says:
As president, Biden will support family-based immigration by
preserving family unification as a foundation of our immigration system; by
allowing any approved applicant to receive a temporary non-immigrant visa until
the permanent visa is processed;
“This is the equivalent to issuing temporary driver’s licenses
to anyone who sends in an application,” said Jessica Vaughan, policy director
for the Center for Immigration Studies. “They can have the temporary license
until they come back for the road test,’ she said.
If Biden’ plan is adopted, “the sky would be the limit … and
besides blowing up the numerical limits on annual immigration [it] would be an
enormous boost to the fake-document and fake-marriage industry,” she said,
adding:
We don’t (or at least we try not to) let people come live here
before they have completed the entire [immigration] application and vetting
process … Under the Biden-Harris system, people would simply create fake
relationships to get the [initial immigration] petition approved, and then get
their temporary visa to come here and just [quit] the application, knowing
there is very little interior enforcement to make them go home later, when or
if the fraud is discovered.
Each year, roughly four million Americans turn 18 and begin
using their skills and diligence to earn wages and salaries.
But the federal government slashes their ability to earn wages
and buy homes by delivering roughly one million legal immigrants — including
about 600,000 workers — to employers around the United States.
The federal government also allows companies to import and keep
roughly 1.3 million foreign contract workers in myriad white collar jobs. Those
jobs, including many well paying Silicon Valley jobs, are needed by U.S.
graduates to advance in their careers.
Congress and the White House also allows companies to keep
roughly 600,000 foreign workers in blue collar seasonal jobs. This inflow
allows companies to avoid building a recruitment business to help young people
find a variety of decent jobs around the United States.
Congress also does little to deport illegals — or even to deter
companies from employing roughly eight million illegal migrant workers.
These federal economic policies help companies and investors by
inflating the labor supply, so raising the price of housing, and spiking
government spending.
Yet at least 150 million more foreigners want to migrate into the United States.
The federal government does not set any limits on the annual
inflow of legal immigrants’ minor children and elderly parents.
But there are limits — and so, waiting lines — for other
categories of immigrants, such as adult children, married children, and
siblings.
Overall, roughly 3.6 million would-be migrants are waiting in multiple lines, according
to a November 2019 report by the Department of State.
For example, more than two million additional people are waiting
in the “Fourth Preference” — or F4 line — for the adult siblings of U.S.
citizens, but only 65,000 are given green cards each year.
Similarly, the federal government awards 23,400 green cars for
the married sons and daughters of green card and citizen immigrants. This
“Third Preference,” or “F3,” waiting list includes 647,236 foreign sons
and daughters — many of whom will also try to bring in their children and
relatives once they are admitted into the United States.
Also, the government provides green cards to 23,400 adult
children of new legal green card immigrants, who are not yet citizens. But
federal data in November 2019 showed that this F2B waiting list of
282,551 adult sons and daughters of green-card holders.
Donald Trump's labor & immigration
promises for a 2nd term are vague but useful.
They are also better for ordinary Americans than Joe Biden's business-backed,
open-ended inflow of wage-cutting & rent-raising blue-collar workers &
college-graduates. https://t.co/OmE4tRPf4T
— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) August 26, 2020
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