Last updated March 3, 2009 10:58 a.m. PT
Bloomberg: Obama's silence on immigration can't last long

ALBERT R. HUNT
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Barack Obama, in his speech to Congress last week, painted a canvas of issues breathtaking in scope: creating jobs, rescuing banks, overhauling the healthcare system, reforming education, fixing Social Security and reversing the nation's direction on energy -- all this year.

In the 6,134-word speech, which briefly touched on Afghanistan and the Middle East, one crucial issue wasn't mentioned: immigration.

The agenda is so full that the political circuits may be overloaded. Some argue the urgency is eroding with the deteriorating economy. The number of illegal immigrants entering the U.S. has plunged -- down to as few as 300,000 last year, or less than half what it was several years ago -- with more leaving now than arriving.

And the politics are even tougher than in the last Congress, when the bipartisan effort of Sens. Ted Kennedy and John McCain and President George W. Bush exploded in emotional recriminations by Republicans and crass calculations by some Democrats. With joblessness having soared since then, it is tougher to argue that the economy needs these workers.

Still, the notion that illegal immigration can be finessed is a mirage. The problem will only get worse, and so will the politics. Obama, 47, a Democrat, would have to renege on his campaign promise to push a major immigration overhaul along the lines of the Kennedy-McCain measure in his first year.

There are industries -- agriculture, food service, construction -- that rely on immigrants. They are going through down times, yet they'll need more people when they bounce back.

That's true of the overall economy, says Tamar Jacoby, a scholar who favors an overhaul of the immigration system.

"Immigration reform may be harder in the middle of a recession, to make the case that we need more workers," Jacoby says. "But the only way out of a recession is to grow out of it, and we need workers to do that."

Even with the dropoff in the number of illegal aliens -- there are still an estimated 11.5 million in the country, or about 4 percent of the population -- the social tensions are worsening. Highly publicized raids are disrupting communities and generating furious resentment among Hispanics.

The new Homeland Security secretary, Janet Napolitano, wasn't even notified of a raid in Washington last week.

And 40 percent of inmates in federal prisons are Hispanic, half of them in for committing immigration crimes, not because they are violent criminals, according to the Washington-based Pew Hispanic Center. That's a huge cost to society.

Given the full agenda, some say the White House should wait on immigration until after the next congressional elections in 2010. That, Jacoby warns, would be a mistake. "Bush waited too long, and then he didn't have the juice."

Two Democrats who are now among the most critically situated on the issue, former Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, were impediments in the last Congress, although both are immigration-reform advocates.

Emanuel worried that the issue would hurt House Democratic candidates in conservative districts, and Schumer clashed with Kennedy, the architect of the Senate bill, over strategy.

Emanuel is now White House chief of staff, and Schumer has taken over the Senate's immigration subcommittee from the ailing Kennedy, a Massachusetts Democrat who is focusing all his political efforts on health care.

Those two smart politicians no doubt appreciate a changed political landscape, with a bigger-than-expected Latino turnout last November. "Both Schumer and Emanuel understand the 2008 election was a game-changer," says Frank Sharry, founder and director of the pro-immigration group, America's Voice.

Earlier fears that immigration had hurt Democrats in 2006 in an Illinois House race and a special election in Massachusetts were trumped by several dozen races where immigration-bashing failed and advocates of the Kennedy-McCain-type measure succeeded.

Dramatic illustrations came in the heavily Hispanic states of New Mexico and Arizona. Three years ago, nine of the 11 House members from those states were Republicans; today eight of the 11 are Democrats, in large part because of Hispanic voters.

The impact wasn't only in Western states. In places such as Virginia and North Carolina, a smaller number of Hispanic voters provided winning margins.

One incumbent Democrat whom House Republicans were confident of defeating last November was Rep. Paul Kanjorski of Scranton, Penn. The Republican candidate was the mayor of Hazleton, whose local crackdown included fining landlords for renting to illegal immigrants and inspired a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union. Yet on Election Day, Kanjorski survived.

In the presidential race, McCain unfairly suffered, because the Republicans became identified as the anti- immigration party. Obama carried the Latino vote by better than 2-1, with a big turnout.

As an issue that divides constituencies, immigration is more of a problem for Republicans. Still, there are tensions among Democrats. Major elements in organized labor -- mainly the AFL-CIO -- are hostile to permitting more liberal procedures for future immigrants; deals will have to be struck.

It's instructive, however, that a driving force for action may be Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who was lukewarm in the last Congress. Reid faces re-election in Nevada in 2010 in a state whose Hispanic population now accounts for almost a quarter of the total. Those voters helped Obama win Nevada last November.

While the agenda that Obama laid out is stunning in its scope, the president and his politically astute chief of staff are likely to conclude that stalling isn't an option on immigration. Emanuel wants to "clean up his image" with Hispanics, says one top Obama adviser.

If so, immigration-reform advocates insist they're ready. "I expect we'll have a come-to-Jesus moment in June, and Rahm will check on how many Republicans there are for the bill," says Sharry. "If there's any sign of economic stabilization, we'll be ready to go."

Albert R. Hunt is the executive editor for Washington at Bloomberg News.

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