The Agricultural Job
Opportunity, Benefits and Security Act, a bill to help immigrant farm
workers establish permanent legal residency, was blocked for
consideration last week by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R- TN).
The Wall Street Journal reports
that even though Frist denies his action was at the request of the
Bush Administration, other legislators have confirmed that the White
House wanted to prevent the bill from reaching the President’s desk.
The center of this
debate is how far the government should go to accept workers who
entered this country illegally, but whose jobs are vital to the
economy. Bush’s own immigration proposals received criticism from
the right this year, and the White House fears that this bill comes
too close to granting amnesty to illegal aliens.
On the other hand, by
delaying consideration of this bill, President Bush and Republicans
risk losing Hispanic votes. Arturo
Rodriguez, president of the Farm Workers union, says that this delay
is “a clear signal that something is wrong in the top leadership of
the Bush administration. If
they can’t deal with this, how will they deal with anything on
immigration?”
This proposal has
received interest from the agriculture industry, strong bipartisan
support in the Senate, as well as the backing from the United Farm
Workers Union and the American Farm Bureau. Advocates of the bill say
that giving migrant workers a path to achieve legal status, but not
citizenship, will give growers a more dependable source of labor.
Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, if elected president, has
committed to signing the legislation “within minutes.”
Sen. Larry Craig (R.,
Idaho), estimates that 80% of the immigrant farm workers in U.S.
fields today are undocumented, illegal aliens.
The Palm Beach Post
reports that Florida agriculture, a $7 billion-a-year industry, relies
on an estimated 300,000 undocumented farm workers.