Saturday, March 20, 2021

NAFTA MAN AND GLOBALIST DEMOCRAT FOR WALL STREET JOE 'BRIBES' BIDEN HAS FOUGHT AGAINST THE AMERICAN WORKER HIS ENTIRE POLITICAL LIFE - NOW HE PROMISES AMNESTY OR CONTINUED NON-ENFORCEMENT ALONG WITH WIDER OPEN BORDERS

JOE BIDEN   -  GET THEM OVER THE BORDERS AND SCATTERED ALL OVER AMERICA WHERE NO ONE WILL EVER HEAR FROM THEM AGAIN. REMEMBER, THIS FUCKER IS A LAWYER. HE HAS SPENT HIS ENTIRE POLITICAL LIFE GAMING THE LAWS AS ALL LAWYERS ARE CONTEMPUOUS OF ANY LAW THAT DOES NOT PROTECT THEIR CRONIES AND PUT MONEY IN THEIR POCKETS.

Biden’s Immigration Dilemma

His sweeping reform probably can’t pass but he can’t ignore the issue especially with a “crisis” of asylum seekers. But there is a way forward.

House Democrats are churning out sweeping legislation on LGBT rights, labor organizing, voting rights and police reform. But when it comes to immigration reform, Democrats are stuck.

Joe Biden followed through on his campaign promise to introduce, on his first day as President, an immigration bill providing a pathway to citizenship for the undocumented. But Democrats don’t have the votes in the House, let alone the Senate, to push through the now decade old idea of a pathway so Biden’s bill won’t get a vote on the Senate floor.

Instead, on Thursday the House approved two bills providing pathways to citizenship for certain groups of undocumented people: The American Dream and Promise Act for “Dreamers,” those brought to American illegally as children, and the Farm Modernization Workforce Act for migrant farmworkers. Yet this incremental strategy isn’t expected to go anywhere in the Senate, according to Biden allies. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois told the New York Times, “I wish we could move just one piece at a time, but I don’t think that’s in the cards.”

When an idea stumbles right out of the gate, it will have a very hard time crossing the finish line. And if immigration reform is in trouble, Democrats are in trouble.

Sure, not every item on the progressive wish list is going to become law. But immigration reform is not just any wish list item; it’s an unfulfilled wish from the last Democratic presidency, leaving behind a frustrated and impatient constituency which includes not only Americans of Hispanic descent, but also business, unions, and progressives.

Through executive action, Obama was able to deliver the consolation prize of the “DACA” program, giving Dreamers temporary legal status. Nevertheless, the lack of comprehensive reform after two terms, combined with stepped up effort on deportations on Obama’s watch, left many immigration advocates deeply disappointed and wanting the kind of change that can only come from legislation. In fact, during the 2020 presidential primaries, immigration was one of the few areas of Obama’s record that candidates were eager to bash—even Biden saw the need to distance himself. For Democrats to disappoint immigrant advocates, after yet another Democratic trifecta, would alienate Latino voters, some of whom are already drifting towards Republicans.

The rising number of Hispanics, already a larger segment of the population than African Americans, has become essential to Democratic power—and not just in Western states where their numbers top 20 percent such as Arizona and Nevada, but also in Southern states such as Georgia and Virginia. Granted, the GOP’s improvement with Latinos in the 2020 election is evidence that a progressive position on immigration is not a sure winner with all Latino voters. But presumably immigration reform still matters to any voter connected to the undocumented or hoping to fully unite their family.

Without the votes in hand, congressional Democrats may want to quietly shelve immigration reform. But the issue will find them.

Evasion isn’t an option when we are experiencing a  periodic border “crisis” of unaccompanied minor refugees seeking asylum.  The Biden administration has struggled to find temporary shelter for them. With memories of the Trump administration’s cruel treatment of kids fresh in their minds, Biden and his Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas have to figure out how to humanely care for and place these young migrants, without encouraging refugees from south of the border to come in greater numbers and further overwhelm the existing system.

Already the media is zeroing in on the border influx, triggering a natural impulse among reporters to uncover potential mismanagement. Republicans are exploiting the situation, with advertisements in Democratic-held House districts lambasting the “Biden Border Crisis.”Biden is also taking some heat from his left; Congressman Ro Khanna has called the conditions for the unaccompanied minors detained at the border “morally unacceptable.” More broadly, Congresswoman Ilhan Omar and 23 other Congress people are pressing the White House to dissolve contracts between federal immigration authorities and state/local prisons and jails for detention services.

Border crossing spikes outside of proper channels will keep happening so long as our immigration system is rickety. And Democrats will be hammered by elements in both parties if they can’t manage it. In other words, forget about punting on immigration.

The temptation to punt is understandable because immigration is an issue fraught with political trip wires. Any influx of new residents who hail from a different cultural background triggers bigoted impulses. Fears of crime, job loss, depressed wages, strained government resources and cultural change are eagerly capitalized on by craven politicians.

Immigration reform has been an uphill political fight for a century. When Congress passed a severely restrictive and racist immigration bill in 1924, one lonely voice of opposition came from Rep. Emanuel Celler, a Democrat from Brooklyn, NY. It took Cellar 41 years to pass the Hart–Celler Act, undoing the law’s use of national origin to determine who can or can’t come to America. Cellar was not only helped by President Lyndon Johnson and one of the most liberal Congresses in history, but also by the miscalculation of racists.

As National Public Radio’s Tom Gjelten once explained, a key conservative Democrat, Rep. Michael Feighan of Ohio, only agreed to accept ending the use of national origin if the bill gave preferential treatment to family members of U.S. citizens. Feighan and his allies assumed that would keep the European character of the immigration stream—one called it a “naturally operating national-origin system.” But they failed to anticipate a decline in European interest. Instead, their family unification scheme ended up supporting a huge increase in immigration from non-European countries.

The 1965 reform bill is a rare, and somewhat inadvertent, example of success. More often immigration reform attempts end in heartbreak. President George W. Bush tried mightily to enact an immigration reform bill, partly driven by political advisor Karl Rove’s desire to win the Hispanic vote. Bush’s 40 percent with Hispanics in the 2004 election remains a high water mark for the GOP for at least the last 50 years, and it seemingly validated his immigration agenda. But when he proposed a bill in 2006 that would allow the existing undocumented workers receive green cards (after returning to their home countries) and establishing a guest worker program, Bush didn’t get a legislative win. Instead, he exposed a massive rift in his party, between a country club wing comfortable with a steady flow of low-cost labor and a nativist wing comfortable with a wall spanning the Mexico border. (We know who’s in charge now.)

Bush needed the help of Democrats, and he got some. Sen. Ted Kennedy toiled with Sen. John McCain on a compromise. But several Democrats and their labor union allies, including then-Sen. Barack Obama, felt the guest worker program would drive down wages. Obama was the deciding vote in favor of a Senate floor amendment that would have made the guest worker program expire in five years. The McCain-Kennedy forces viewed that amendment as a poison pill, and while the amendment backers chafed at that characterization, the subsequent cloture vote was won by a bipartisan—but mostly Republican—coalition of filibusterers.

Obama would try next, and fail next. As with Bush, Obama’s re-election appeared to boost the chances of immigration reform. Mitt Romney, who spoke of “self-deportation” of the undocumented on the campaign trail, won only 27% of the Hispanic vote—the worst performance among Hispanics by a Republican in a two-person presidential race in the last 50 years, and that includes both of Trump’s campaigns.

Republicans were so stunned, they immediately spoke of getting behind immigration reform to defuse the issue. Two days after the election, conservative talk show host Sean Hannity told his audience he had “evolved” on immigration, and now believed, “if people are here, law-abiding, participating for years, their kids are born here, you know, first secure the border, pathway to citizenship, done.” On the same day, House Speaker John Boehner said to ABC News, “This issue has been around far too long. And while I believe it’s important for us to secure our borders and to enforce our laws, I think a comprehensive approach is long overdue. And I’m confident that the president, myself, others, can find the common ground to take care of this issue once and for all.”

The political stars looked aligned. And then one month later, Sandy Hook happened.

Six days before that traumatic school massacre, the Los Angeles Times reported that after the year-end negotiations over expiring tax provisions wrapped up, “the Obama administration will begin an all-out drive for comprehensive immigration reform, including seeking a path to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants.” The report indicated Obama’s team knew they had to play their hot hand quickly: “Democratic strategists believe there is only a narrow window at the beginning of the year to get an initiative launched in Congress, before lawmakers begin to turn their attention to the next election cycle and are less likely to take a risky vote on a controversial bill.”

Sandy Hook prompted a shaken Obama to respond to a shaken nation, and begin his second term with a push for gun control, not immigration reform.

Obama had just won re-election with a campaign that did not stress gun control. Nor had he in his initial election. Democrats had largely concluded the issue hurt them in key swing states in the 2000 and 2004 elections, and Obama’s two victories backed up that theory. In turn, Obama had no electoral mandate for gun control, in stark contrast to immigration reform—an issue for which Republicans had already conceded Obama did have a mandate.

Driven by an understandable sense of moral urgency, and standing with family members of the Sandy Hook victims, Obama proposed in January 2013 a wide range of gun control measures and pledged to “put everything I’ve got into this.”But lacking a mandate, as well as intra-party unity, Obama was unable to get a vote on such a controversial package. He had to settle for a narrow bill from Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin and Republican Sen. Pat Toomey that would expand background checks. And that bill got filibustered.

On the day of that mid-April filibuster vote, sapping Obama of his post-election political momentum, a bipartisan Senate group finally introduced an immigration reform bill. They got it past the Senate in June in a 68-32 vote with the help of 14 Republicans. But by then, conservatives had regained their ideological footing.

Hannity flipped back, trashing the Senate bill as bad for Republicans electorally. With more distance from the election, House Republicans shook off the interpretation of the November results that Hispanics felled Romney, and increasingly embraced the view that too few whites were motivated to vote. The party’s nativist voices were heeded, and the Chamber of Commerce’s support for the Senate bill was disregarded. Speaker Boehner suppressed his own support for reform, and bowed to the notion that he should not put any bill on the House floor that lacked majority support within the Republican caucus. (This principle was known as the “Hastert Rule,” named after Boehner’s predecessor as Speaker Dennis Hastert, who later admitted to child sex abuse while working as a high school wrestling coach.)

The only time the political stars aligned for immigration reform since the days of LBJ was 35 years ago, when Republican President Ronald Reagan signed legislation granting legal status to an estimated 3-5 million undocumented people. And that was the culmination of an 9-year legislative process.

Reagan’s predecessor Jimmy Carter first proposed a bill that paired amnesty for the undocumented with financial penalties on employers who hired the undocumented. Reagan pushed for the plan as well. But throughout his first term the proposal attracted opposition from both immigrant advocates and business leaders. The legislative breakthrough occurred in 1986 when a not-quite 36-year-old House member in his third term, as reported by the New York Times, “negotiated a compromise to assure farmers a steady supply of foreign workers while protecting the workers’ rights.”

The value of that history lesson is to remind us that progressive immigration reform has never been easy, and never will be easy. The politics of immigration have always scrambled party lines, and painstaking negotiations have always been required to build the necessary coalitions.

With that in mind, we should not be surprised that immigration reform in 2021 looks doomed. But Democrats should not allow the bleak political landscape to bump immigration off the priority list.

The early trouble in the House indicates that passing reform on a party-line vote, even if the filibuster is reformed or killed, is highly unlikely. Further, while some activists hope that Democrats could pass immigration measures through the budget reconciliation process, the parliamentarian’s strict ruling keeping minimum wage out of the recent relief bill suggests that no one should expect an expansive interpretation of rules treating immigration reform measures as budgetary items. So Democrats should get to work on actual negotiating, with Republicans and among themselves

Some immigration advocates have expressed opposition to another “comprehensive” bill because that has meant making concessions to Republicans on border security measures, preferring an incrementalist strategy in which the incremental steps involve no compromises. But Sen. Durbin’s comments suggest that even Senate Democrats won’t have the votes to move immigration reform in piecemeal fashion. Whenever we have an excess of asylum seekers at the border, moderate Democrats will likely become worried about Republican attacks and more insistent that reform bills include a border security component.

One compromise proposal that has promise, from the Washington Monthly’s Daniel Block, is to empower localities to have more say in how many refugees resettle in their communities, since research shows anti-immigrant sentiment decreases when locals feel they have control over the process.

If the prospect of striking bipartisan compromise on a highly charged subject like immigration during a time of deep polarization in Washington seems daunting, consider this:

That young hot shot who struck the bargain to clinch the last major immigration reform bill in 1986? He’s now Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.


San Francisco Approves Plan for Budget Surplus: $4.4M for Arts Grants, $2M for ‘Undocumented Families’

In this photo taken July 25, 2019, sleeping people, discarded clothes and used needles sit across the street from a staffed "Pit Stop" public toilet in the Tenderloin neighborhood in San Francisco. Merchants say the bathrooms have given homeless and other people a private place to go so they don't …
AP Photo/Janie Har
3:02

The city of San Francisco has a long laundry list of what it wants to do with its $125 million budget surplus, including millions for “cultural equity” in the arts and for families who are in the United States illegally.

Even as the city faces epidemics of homelessness and drug overdoses, Mayor London Breed and the city budget board’s chairman prioritized other things, including $2 million for the Family Relief Fund for “vulnerable and undocumented families who were not eligible for other forms of state and federal financial support.”

The city finalized a plan this week that designates $1.6 million for “overdose prevention” and none for homelessness but did put aside $10 million for expansion of low-income housing.

City officials decided $24 million should go to the arts, including $4.4 million to the Arts Commission’s cultural equity endowment, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Supervisor Matt Haney, the budget chairman, said in the Chronicle report:

These are urgent priorities that can’t wait and this supplemental package will help our city recover and help keep small businesses open, support kids and keep tenants in their home. The funds are going directly and overwhelmingly to the people who are most impacted during this crisis.

Breed said in a press release announcing the decision:

One year ago today we went into a Shelter in Place that, while saving lives, has impacted our city like nothing I’ve ever seen. We’ve had small businesses close, our students have been out of the classrooms for over a year, and people are worried about how they are going to pay rent.

People continue to struggle with housing security and addiction, and our arts and culture sector, which is part of what makes San Francisco so unique, is suffering. While we are working towards our long-term recovery, we know we need this immediate support that will help get our City back on its feet.

“Our goal now is to get this funding approved and out the door and into the hands of those who need it as fast possible,” Breed said.

Other spending approved includes $53 million for small businesses, the Chronicle reported:

The intent is to help 1,000 small low-income businesses, with a focus on those owned by women and people of color that were most hurt by shelter-in-place and haven’t accessed state or federal relief. Grants will vary from $5,000 to $25,000, based on how many full-time employees the business has. Loans will supplement an existing state lending program, but with a lower interest rate.

Also included is $20 million for “rent relief” and affordable housing, and $17 million for student summer programs so that students can attend for free.

Follow Penny Starr on Twitter or send news tips to pstarr@breitbart.com

THE NEW PRIVILEGED CLASS: Illegals!

This is why you work From Jan - May paying taxes to the government ....with the rest of the calendar year is money for you and your family.

Take, for example, an illegal alien with a wife and five children. He takes a job for $5.00 or 6.00/hour. At that wage, with six dependents, he pays no income tax, yet at the end of the year, if he files an Income Tax Return, with his fake Social Security number, he gets an "earned income credit" of up to $3,200..... free.

He qualifies for Section 8 housing and subsidized rent.

He qualifies for food stamps.

He qualifies for free (no deductible, no co-pay) health care.

His children get free breakfasts and lunches at school.

He requires bilingual teachers and books.

He qualifies for relief from high energy bills.

If they are or become, aged, blind or disabled, they qualify for SSI.

Once qualified for SSI they can qualify for Medicare. All of this is at (our) taxpayer's expense.

He doesn't worry about car insurance, life insurance, or homeowners insurance.

Taxpayers provide Spanish language signs, bulletins and printed material.

He and his family receive the equivalent of $20.00 to $30.00/hour in benefits.

Working Americans are lucky to have $5.00 or $6.00/hour left after Paying their bills and his.

The American taxpayers also pay for increased crime, graffiti and trash clean-up.

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2018/08/californias-privileged-class-mexican.html

 Cheap labor? YEAH RIGHT! Wake up people! 

 JOE LEGAL v LA RAZA JOSE ILLEGAL

Here’s how it breaks down; will make you want to be an illegal!

 

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/05/joe-american-legal-vs-la-raza-jose.html

 

THE TAX-FREE MEXICAN UNDERGROUND ECONOMY IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY IS ESTIMATED TO BE IN EXCESS OF $2 BILLION YEARLY!

 

Staggering expensive "cheap" Mexican labor did not build this once great nation! Look what it has done to Mexico. It's all about keeping wages depressed and passing along the true cost of the invasion, their welfare, and crime tidal wave costs to the backs of the American people!

 

AMERICA: YOU’RE BETTER OFF BEING AN ILLEGAL!!!

 

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2018/06/in-america-it-is-better-to-be-illegal.html

 

This annual income for an impoverished American family is $10,000 less than the more than $34,500 in federal funds which are spent on each unaccompanied minor border crosser.

study by Tom Wong of the University of California at San Diego discovered that more than 25 percent of DACA-enrolled illegal aliens in the program have anchor babies. That totals about 200,000 anchor babies who are the children of DACA-enrolled illegal aliens. This does not include the anchor babies of DACA-qualified illegal aliens. JOHN BINDER


As Breitbart News has reported, U.S. households headed by foreign-born residents use nearly twice the welfare of households headed by native-born Americans.

Simultaneously, illegal immigration next year is on track to soar to the highest level in a decade, with a potential 600,000 border crossers expected.

 

“More than 750 million people want to migrate to another country permanently, according to Gallup research published Monday, as 150 world leaders sign up to the controversial UN global compact which critics say makes migration a human right.”  VIRGINIA HALE


For example, a DACA amnesty would cost American taxpayers about $26 billion, more than the border wall, and that does not include the money taxpayers would have to fork up to subsidize the legal immigrant relatives of DACA illegal aliens. 

 

Exclusive–Steve Camarota: Every Illegal Alien Costs Americans $70K Over Their Lifetime

 

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/04/11/exclusive-steve-camarota-every-illegal-alien-costs-americans-70k-over-their-lifetime/

 

JOHN BINDER

 Every illegal alien, over the course of their lifetime, costs American taxpayers about $70,000, Center for Immigration Studies Director of Research Steve Camarota says.

During an interview with SiriusXM Patriot’s Breitbart News Daily, Camarota said his research has revealed the enormous financial burden that illegal immigration has on America’s working and middle class taxpayers in terms of public services, depressed wages, and welfare.

“In a person’s lifetime, I’ve estimated that an illegal border crosser might cost taxpayers … maybe over $70,000 a year as a net cost,” Camarota said. “And that excludes the cost of their U.S.-born children, which gets pretty big when you add that in.”

LISTEN: 

“Once [an illegal alien] has a child, they can receive cash welfare on behalf of their U.S.-born children,” Camarota explained. “Once they have a child, they can live in public housing. Once they have a child, they can receive food stamps on behalf of that child. That’s how that works.”

Camarota said the education levels of illegal aliens, border crossers, and legal immigrants are largely to blame for the high level of welfare usage by the f0reign-born population in the U.S., noting that new arrivals tend to compete for jobs against America’s poor and working class communities.

In past waves of mass immigration, Camarota said, the U.S. did not have an expansive welfare system. Today’s ever-growing welfare system, coupled with mass illegal and legal immigration levels, is “extremely problematic,” according to Camarota, for American taxpayers.

The RAISE Act — reintroduced in the Senate by Senators Tom Cotton (R-AR), David Perdue (R-GA), and Josh Hawley (R-MO) — would cut legal immigration levels in half and convert the immigration system to favor well-educated foreign nationals, thus relieving American workers and taxpayers of the nearly five-decade-long wave of booming immigration. Currently, mass legal immigration redistributes the wealth of working and middle class Americans to the country’s top earners.

“Virtually none of that existed in 1900 during the last great wave of immigration, when we also took in a number of poor people. We didn’t have a well-developed welfare state,” Camarota continued:

We’re not going to stop [the welfare state] tomorrow. So in that context, bringing in less educated people who are poor is extremely problematic for public coffers, for taxpayers in a way that it wasn’t in 1900 because the roads weren’t even paved between the cities in 1900. It’s just a totally different world. And that’s the point of the RAISE Act is to sort of bring in line immigration policy with the reality say of a large government … and a welfare state. [Emphasis added]

The immigrants are not all coming to get welfare and they don’t immediately sign up, but over time, an enormous fraction sign their children up. It’s likely the case that of the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants, more than half are signed up for Medicaid — which is our most expensive program. [Emphasis added]

As Breitbart News has reported, U.S. households headed by foreign-born residents use nearly twice the welfare of households headed by native-born Americans.

 

Every year the U.S. admits more than 1.5 million foreign nationals, with the vast majority deriving from chain migration. In 2017, the foreign-born population reached a record high of 44.5 million. By 2023, the Center for Immigration Studies estimates that the legal and illegal immigrant population of the U.S. will make up nearly 15 percent of the entire U.S. population.

Breitbart News Daily airs on SiriusXM Patriot 125 weekdays from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Eastern.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder

 

 Another line they cut into: Illegals get free public housing as impoverished Americans wait

 

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2019/04/another_line_they_cut_into_illegals_get_free_public_housing_as_impoverished_americans_wait.html

 

By Monica Showalter

Want some perspective on why so many blue sanctuary cities have so many homeless encampments hovering around?

Try the reality that illegal immigrants are routinely given free public housing by the U.S., based on the fact that they are uneducated, unskilled, and largely unemployable. Those are the criteria, and now importing poverty has never been easier. Shockingly, this comes as millions of poor Americans are out in the cold awaiting that housing that the original law was intended to help.

Thus, the tent cities, and by coincidence, the worst of these emerging shantytowns are in blue sanctuary cities loaded with illegal immigrants - Orange County, San Francisco, San Diego, Seattle, New York...Is there a connection? At a minimum, it's worth looking at.

The Trump administration's Department of Housing and Urban Development is finally trying to put a stop to it as 1.5 million illegals prepare to enter the U.S. this year, and one can only wonder why they didn't do it yesterday.

According to a report in the Washington Times:

The plan would scrap Clinton-era regulations that allowed illegal immigrants to sign up for assistance without having to disclose their status.

Under the new Trump rules, not only would the leaseholder using public housing have to be an eligible U.S. person, but the government would verify all applicants through the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) database, a federal system that’s used to weed illegal immigrants out of other welfare programs.

Those already getting HUD assistance would have to go through a new verification, though it would be over a period of time and wouldn’t all come at once.

“We’ve got our own people to house and need to take care of our citizens,” an administration official told The Washington Times. “Because of past loopholes in HUD guidance, illegal aliens were able to live in free public housing desperately needed by so many of our own citizens. As illegal aliens attempt to swarm our borders, we’re sending the message that you can’t live off of American welfare on the taxpayers’ dime.”

The Times notes that the rules are confusingly contradictary, and some illegal immigrant families are getting full rides based on just one member being born in the U.S. The pregnant caravaner who calculatingly slipped across the U.S. in San Diego late last year, only to have her baby the next day, now, along with her entire family, gets that free ride on government housing. Plus lots of cheesy news coverage about how heartwarming it all is. That's a lot cheaper than any housing she's going to find back in Tegucigalpa.

Migrants would be almost fools not to take the offering.

The problem of course is that Americans who paid into these programs, and the subset who find themselves in dire circumstances, are in fact being shut out.

The fill-the-pews Catholic archbishops may love to tout the virtues of illegal immigrants and wave signs about getting 'justice" for them, but the hard fact here is that these foreign nationals are stealing from others as they take this housing benefit under legal technicalities. That's not a good thing under anyone's theological law. But hypocrisy is comfortable ground for the entire open borders lobby as they shamelessly celebrate lawbreaking at the border, leaving the impoverished of the U.S. out cold.

The Trump administration is trying to have this outrage fixed by summer. But don't imagine it won't be without the open-borders lawsuits, the media sob stories, the leftist judges, and the scolding clerics.

Los Angeles County Pays Over a Billion in Welfare to Illegal Aliens Over Two Years

 

BY MASOOMA HAQ

In 2015 and 2016, Los Angeles County paid nearly $1.3 billion in welfare funds to illegal aliens and their families. That figure amounts to 25 percent of the total spent on the county’s entire needy population, according to Fox News.

The state of California is home to more illegal aliens than any other state in the country. Approximately one in five illegal aliens lives in California, Pew reported.

Approximately a quarter of California’s 4 million illegal immigrants reside in Los Angeles County. The county allows illegal immigrant parents with children born in the United States to seek welfare and food stamp benefits.

The welfare benefits data acquired by Fox News comes from the Los Angeles County Department of Public Social Services and shows welfare and food stamp costs for the county’s entire population were $3.1 billion in 2015, $2.9 billion in 2016.

The data also shows that during the first five months of 2017, more than 60,000 families received a total of $181 million.

Over 58,000 families received a total of $602 million in benefits in 2015 and more than 64,000 families received a total of $675 million in 2016.

Robert Rector, a Heritage Foundation senior fellow who studies poverty and illegal immigration, told Fox the costs represent “the tip of the iceberg.”

“They get $3 in benefits for every $1 they spend,” Rector said. It can cost the government a total of $24,000 per year per family to pay for things like education, police, fire, medical, and subsidized housing.

In February of 2019, the Los Angeles city council signed a resolution making it a sanctuary city. The resolution did not provide any new legal protections to their immigrants, but instead solidified existing policies.

In October 2017, former California governor Jerry Brown signed SB 54 into law. This bill made California, in Brown’s own words, a “sanctuary state.” The Justice Department filed a lawsuit against the State of California over the law. A federal judge dismissed that suit in July. SB 54 took effect on Jan. 1, 2018.

According to Center for Immigration Studies, “The new law does many things: It forbids all localities from cooperating with ICE detainer notices, it bars any law enforcement officer from participating in the popular 287(g) program, and it prevents state and local police from inquiring about individuals’ immigration status.”

Some counties in California have protested its implementation and joined the Trump administration’s lawsuit against the state.

California’s campaign to provide public services to illegal immigrants did not end with the exit of Jerry Brown. His successor, Gavin Newsom, is just as focused as Brown in funding programs for illegal residents at the expense of California taxpayers.

California’s budget earmarks millions of dollars annually to the One California program, which provides free legal assistance to all aliens, including those facing deportation, and makes California’s public universities easier for illegal-alien students to attend.

According to the Fiscal Burden of Illegal Immigration on United States Taxpayers 2017 report, for the estimated 12.5 million illegal immigrants living in the country, the resulting cost is a $116 billion burden on the national economy and taxpayers each year, after deducting the $19 billion in taxes paid by some of those illegal immigrants.

BLOG: MOST FIGURES PUT THE NUMBER OF ILLEGALS IN THE U.S. AT ABOUT 40 MILLION. WHEN THESE PEOPLE ARE HANDED AMNESTY, THEY ARE LEGALLY ENTITLED TO BRING UP THE REST OF THEIR FAMILY EFFECTIVELY LEAVING MEXICO DESERTED.

 

New data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows that more than 22 million non-citizens now live in the United States.

State and Local Politicians Move to Grant Coronavirus Relief to Illegal Aliens


By Matthew Tragesser


ImmigrationReform.com

https://www.immigrationreform.com/2020/04/08/illegal-alien-benefits-states-immigrationreform-com/

 

Study: More than 7-in-10 California Immigrant

Welfare


https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2018/12/04/study-more-than-7-in-10-california-immigrant-households-are-on-welfare/

 


More than 7-in-10 households headed by immigrants in the state of California are on taxpayer-funded welfare, a new study reveals.

The latest Census Bureau data analyzed by the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) finds that about 72 percent of households headed by noncitizens and immigrants use one or more forms of taxpayer-funded welfare programs in California — the number one immigrant-receiving state in the U.S.

Meanwhile, only about 35 percent of households headed by native-born Americans use welfare in California.

All four states with the largest foreign-born populations, including California, have extremely high use of welfare by immigrant households. In Texas, for example, nearly 70 percent of households headed by immigrants use taxpayer-funded welfare. Meanwhile, only about 35 percent of native-born households in Texas are on welfare.

In New York and Florida, a majority of households headed by immigrants and noncitizens are on welfare. Overall, about 63 percent of immigrant households use welfare while only 35 percent of native-born households use welfare.

President Trump’s administration is looking to soon implement a policy that protects American taxpayers’ dollars from funding the mass importation of welfare-dependent foreign nationals by enforcing a “public charge” rule whereby legal immigrants would be less likely to secure a permanent residency in the U.S. if they have used any forms of welfare in the past, including using Obamacare, food stamps, and public housing.

The immigration controls would be a boon for American taxpayers in the form of an annual $57.4 billion tax cut — the amount taxpayers spend every year on paying for the welfare, crime, and schooling costs of the country’s mass importation of 1.5 million new, mostly low-skilled legal immigrants.

As Breitbart News reported, the majority of the more than 1.5 million foreign nationals entering the country every year use about 57 percent more food stamps than the average native-born American household. Overall, immigrant households consume 33 percent more cash welfare than American citizen households and 44 percent more in Medicaid dollars. This straining of public services by a booming 44 million foreign-born population translates to the average immigrant household costing American taxpayers $6,234 in federal welfare.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder. 


Study: Amnesty Will Cost ‘Hundreds of Billions’


NEIL MUNRO

President Joe Biden’s amnesty plan will spike Social Security spending by “hundreds of billions” over the next few decades, according to a forecast by the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS).

The February 22 report, titled “Amnesty Would Cost the Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds Hundreds of Billions of Dollars,” says:

The new taxes paid by the average amnesty recipient amount to only half of the $94,500 noted above. The net effect of amnesty is therefore $140,330 [in Social Security benefits] minus $47,250 [in paid taxes], which is about $93,000 per recipient. In any large-scale amnesty, in which millions of illegal immigrants gain legal status, it is easy to see how the net cost could reach into the hundreds of billions of dollars.

The predicted $93,000 per person cost would be a financial burden for taxpayers — but would be a giveaway to business groups because the Social Security payments will be converted into purchases of consumer products, healthcare services, medical drugs, apartments, and food.

At least 11 million people — perhaps 20 million — are living illegally in the United States. The number rises as people overstay their visas, evade deportation orders, or sneak over the border — but it also falls as some migrants get deported, leave, or find ways to get green cards via the rolling “Adjustment of Status” process.

But taxpayers’ expenses are also economic gains for business groups and investors. In January 2020, a coalition of business groups sued deputies for President Donald Trump after he reduced the inflow of poor migrants into the U.S. consumer market, saying:

Because [green-card applicants] will receive fewer public benefits under the Rule, they will cut back their consumption of goods and services, depressing demand throughout the economy …

The New American Economy Research Fund calculates that, on top of the $48 billion in income that is earned by individuals who will be affected by the Rule—and that will likely be removed from the U.S. economy—the Rule will cause an indirect economic loss of more than $33.9 billion … Indeed, the Fiscal Policy Institute has estimated that the decrease in SNAP and Medicaid enrollment under the Rule could, by itself, lead to economic ripple effects of anywhere between $14.5 and $33.8 billion, with between approximately 100,000 and 230,000 jobs lost … Health centers alone would be forced to drop as many as 6,100 full-time medical staff.

CIS promised a more detailed report:

This is just a rough estimate. We are currently working on a detailed model that will provide more precise costs for both Social Security and Medicare. Again, however, any reasonable calculation will produce a large cost, simply because amnesty will convert so many outside contributors into actual beneficiaries.

For years, a wide variety of pollsters have shown deep and broad opposition to labor migration and to the inflow of temporary contract workers into jobs sought by young U.S. graduates.

The multiracialcross-sexnon-racistclass-basedintra-Democratic, and solidarity-themed opposition to labor migration coexists with generally favorable personal feelings toward legal immigrants and toward immigration in theory — despite the media magnification of many skewed polls and articles that still push the 1950’s corporate “Nation of Immigrants” claim.

The deep public opposition is built on the widespread recognition that migration moves money from employees to employers, from families to investors, from young to old, from children to their parents, from homebuyers to real estate investors, and from the central states to the coastal states.

However, Biden’s officials have been broadcasting their desire to change border policies to help extract more migrants from Central America for the U.S. economy. On February 19, for example, deputies of DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas posted a tweet offering support to migrants illegally working in the United States and to migrants who may wish to live in the United States.

We'll get 1 million-plus Biden migrants this year, warns ex-Obama/DHS official now at Harvard.
The warning includes a weak criticism of the ethnic lobbies & open-borders progressives who are undermining an Ivy League giveaway in the amnesty bill.#H1B https://t.co/RqZBEGcxKO

— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) February 22, 2021

 

Biden’s HHS Nominee Does Not Rule Out Taxpayer-Funded Healthcare for Illegal Aliens

 

JOHN BINDER

President Joe Biden’s nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, dodged a question on whether he would push to provide American taxpayer-funded healthcare benefits to illegal aliens.

This week, during a hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, Becerra was asked by Senator Steve Daines (R-MT) about his previous support for decriminalizing illegal immigration and providing illegal aliens with taxpayer-funded healthcare benefits.

Becerra, though, dodged the question by saying he would follow the parameters of the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, which he said allows “very rare” cases of illegal aliens to receive benefits.

The exchange went as follows:

DAINES: You’re on record for pushing for allowing illegal immigrants to receive taxpayer-funded healthcare and for decriminalizing illegal entry into the United States. This coupled with President Biden’s radical plan for granting citizenship to those who are here illegally would potentially lead to hundreds of thousands, if not potentially millions, more people flooding into our country. [Emphasis added]

As you know, in 2016, California passed a law requiring covered Californians to apply for … waivers to allow illegal immigrants to purchase health insurance in the marketplace. This waiver was withdrawn after President Trump’s election. [Emphasis added]

My question is this: Will you attempt to use the waiver authority contained in the Affordable Care Act to grant healthcare benefits to illegal immigrants? [Emphasis added]

BECERRA: Senator, I can tell you that where the law, as it stands now as I see it, it does not allow those who are unauthorized in this country to receive taxpayer-paid benefits except in very rare circumstances and it will be my job to make sure that we are following and enforcing the law. And I can commit to you that that is what we will do. [Emphasis added]

In a letter to Biden, 11 Senate Republicans and 64 House Republicans asked the president to withdraw Becerra’s nomination to be HHS Secretary, citing his support for taxpayer-funded healthcare benefits for illegal aliens, among other issues.

“Mr. Becerra seeks to decriminalize illegal immigration, which would extend expensive government benefits like Medicaid to anyone who illegally crosses our borders,” the letter states.

A Politico report this week suggested Becerra is eyeing plans to provide illegal aliens with taxpayer-funded healthcare benefits should he lead HHS.

“He’s one of those individuals that had exceedingly deep convictions about the need to cover the undocumented individuals in all of our communities,” former Rep. Charles Gonzalez (D-TX) told Politico of Becerra.

Should Becerra become HHS Secretary, he could let illegal aliens onto Obamacare exchanges while pressuring states to pursue similar policies to those in California. Likewise, Becerra could open Obamacare exchanges to particular subgroups of illegal aliens, like those enrolled in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.

As Breitbart News reported, forcing taxpayers to provide healthcare to all illegal aliens would cost citizens anywhere between $23 billion to $66 billion every single year — potentially a $660 billion bill for taxpayers every decade, without adjusting for inflation and the increasing number of illegal aliens.

Cost is only the first issue facing taxpayers. Medical experts have admitted providing healthcare to illegal aliens would ensure a never-ending flood of illegal aliens arriving at the southern border with “serious health problems” and local hospitals would have to cover the costs.

Already, taxpayers are forced to subsidize about $18.5 billion of yearly medical costs for illegal aliens living in the U.S., according to estimates by Chris Conover, formerly of the Center for Health Policy and Inequalities Research at Duke University.

When U.S. voters were polled by CNN on the issue in July 2019, nearly 6-in-10 said they were opposed to such a policy, including 63 percent of swing voters and 61 percent of self-described “moderates.”

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here


Biden's Coordinator for Southern Border: 'We Will Be Opening New Paths for Legal Entry Into the U.S.'

By Susan Jones | March 18, 2021 | 5:15am EDT

 

Border Patrol agents apprehend a group of migrants near downtown El Paso, Texas following the congressional border delegation visit on March 15, 2021. (Photo by JUSTIN HAMEL/AFP via Getty Images)
Border Patrol agents apprehend a group of migrants near downtown El Paso, Texas following the congressional border delegation visit on March 15, 2021. (Photo by JUSTIN HAMEL/AFP via Getty Images)

(CNSNews.com) - As illegal immigration overwhelms the Southwest border, "we will be opening new paths for legal entry into the United States," Roberta Jacobson, President Biden's coordinator for the southern border, said on Wednesday.

She also told MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell she thinks Biden's "don't come" message to undocumented people will "get widely distributed."

Mitchell asked Jacobson how Biden's "don't come" message will reach "desperate families in the Northern Triangle who are waiting at the Mexican border?"

“Well, I think people do pick up the president's message all over,” Jacobson replied.

But, moreover, that's why we have embassies and consulates, and we work with civil society groups, the UNHCR, the International Organization for Migration, and other groups to repeat the president's message that people should not come in this fashion, that we will be opening new paths for legal entry into the United States, but that we are enforcing our laws.

And so I think the message -- the president's message will get widely distributed. But, as I have said before, the smugglers are very agile, and their message gets through quickly.

Unchecked illegal immigration works to the advantage of the smugglers who encourage it, because it diverts Border Patrol resources away from the smugglers.

Jacobson said "hardship" and "desperation" in Central America are prompting people to make the difficult journey to the United States, and she said that creates an "urgency to ensure that we open up legal paths for people."

"It is reflective of crises that are compounded by climate change, two hurricanes in 15 days, violence, et cetera. So, we know that there are people in very dire straits, which is why we feel enormous urgency, urgency to get very quick-disbursing humanitarian assistance there faster, so that people can stay home, and urgency to ensure that we open up legal paths for people, so they don't have to undertake these journeys."

The goal is to allow people to apply for asylum in their home countries, but that will take time, and it’s unlikely to stanch the flood at the Southwest border.

Meanwhile, Jacobson on Wednesday did nothing to discourage children from coming here.

Speaking about the thousands of children being moved to places like the Dallas convention center, she said, "we will continue to ensure that we expand options for these children to meet the need.”

She noted that Border Patrol stations are no place for children: "And that's why we're expanding the number of beds and also accelerating the process to get children through HHS and to families and sponsors, so that we can shorten the amount of time kids are in either CBP or HHS custody and on to families, and ensuring that we have appropriate places that protect and safeguard children.

"I think all of us agree that children need to be handled in a humane and safe way. The pandemic obviously complicates that."

Jacobson noted that FEMA is working to find "more options" for shelter: "They're moving very, very quickly, so that we can ensure the children are in appropriate care.

“But it isn't just a building. It is staff to handle them. And I think that it is important that we make sure the background checks are conducted on staff, that we do everything we can to ensure they are in a safe place and that we don't put children at risk.

“And we are moving kids as quickly as we possibly can.”

(So the message is, if children – including teenagers age 17 and maybe older -- reach the U.S., they'll be housed, clothed, fed, treated "humanely," and moved quickly to the homes of relatives or sponsors.)


CBO: Democrat Amnesty Bill Would Cost over $35 Billion

Young immigrants, activists and supporters of the DACA program march through downtown Los Angeles, California on September 5, 2017 after the Trump administration formally announced it will end the DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) program, giving Congress six months to act.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images
2:28

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released an analysis Thursday which found the Democrats’ amnesty bill would cost $35 billion over ten years.

The Dream and Promise Act would grant amnesty to several million illegal immigrants that allegedly were brought to the United States as children by their illegal immigrant parents. The legislation would also deliver green cards to hundreds of thousands of foreigners who were given Temporary Protected Status (TPS) or Deferred Enforced Departure status.

The Migration Policy Institute (MPI) found the legislation could grant amnesty to roughly 4.4 million illegal aliens of the 11 to 22 million illegal aliens living in the United States.

Democrats, and some Republicans, voted for the legislation as roughly 17 million Americans remain unemployed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The legislation passed through the House Thursday evening with 228 votes in favor of the bill and 197 votes against. Nine House Republicans voted in favor of the Democrat amnesty bill.

The CBO released its estimate of the Dream Act and found it would cost $35.3 billion over the next ten years.

The nonpartisan agency found that the primary cost of the amnesty would arise from illegal immigrants obtaining eligibility for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and Medicaid tax credits, as well as the earned income and child tax credits. In contrast, the federal government would only receive slight revenues from migrants receiving lawful permanent resident (LPR) status by charging them corporate income and Medicare taxes, and the non-refundable portion of tax credits for health insurance.

The federal government would also expect additional costs from those with LPR status from obtaining eligibility for Social Security benefits, while only receiving slight revenues from Social Security payroll taxes.

Overall, the Dream and Promise Act would cost $42.48 billion and bring in revenues of $7.15 billion, meaning it would cost $35 billion over ten years,  or 2031.

Sean Moran is a congressional reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter @SeanMoran3.

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