Trump’s Immigration Insanity

 

In the past week, President Donald Trump issued three Executive Orders (EOs) dealing with the status of immigrants and refugees in the United States. The first EO announced that it will deny federal funding to any sanctuary city, or city that refuses to cooperate in the deportation of illegal immigrants in the United States. The second EO declared the intention to build a wall to keep illegal immigrants from Mexico from coming into the United States. The third EO has three components: The first part bars indefinitely all Syrian refugees from entering the United States; the second suspends all refugee admissions for 120 days; the third blocks citizens from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen, whether refugees or not, from entering this country for a period of 90 days. Parts of this order will remain in place until the government devises, in Trump’s own words, a program of “extreme vetting” of immigrants.

Of these, the ill-timed and stealth immigration and refugee order is by far the worst because it was imposed immediately, without warning or consultation, and hits hard at people who happen to be abroad—although now it appears, after some confusion, that the order does not apply to permanent residents, who may face extra scrutiny at airports, but are not categorically barred. Nonetheless the stories are legion of “scientists, business travelers and grandmothers” held in limbo by the new rules. The dislocations have prompted a massive outcry, not only from progressives, but also from classical liberals like myself who think of themselves as part of the loyal opposition. Indeed, the refugee and immigration order has already given rise to a class action challenge to the law, and to a decision by Judge Ann Donnelly of New York that blocked, at least temporarily, U.S. immigration authorities from forcing incoming refugees back home on the ground that deportation would cause them irreparable injury. At this writing, similar orders have been issued in Boston, Seattle, and Virginia. President Trump, largely oblivious to the chaos and protests, observes that the ban was “working out very nicely,” but “it’s not a Muslim ban.”

Clearly, Trump’s inflammatory campaign rhetoric was not for show. For better or worse, the president meant every word he said, and therein lies the source of the problem. The ostensible justification for these orders is the promotion of national security, an end whose legitimacy no sane person would dispute. But the question is—what means should be used to achieve that end? As is the case of all government actions under conditions of uncertainty, it is necessary to balance the risks of two kinds of error. The first facilitates the entry of people into the United States who ought not to be here. The second excludes entry from the United States of people who should be here. The president is right to note the high stakes of any terrorist attack. But he shows his blindness by trying to keep out people who should, by any standard of moral decency or economic self-interest, be allowed in. In my view, the obvious danger in these situations is transient gains at unacceptable political, moral, and social costs.

The first element to be considered in any grand reorganization of American immigration and refugee policy is the level of terrorist risk posed by new entrants. On this score, a 2016 Cato Policy Analysis on terrorism and immigration shows the debate is highly skewed by the outlier of the 9/11 attacks. It is of course imperative to take some steps to deal with these issues, but a wholesale ban seems to be wildly overbroad given the multiple ways in which home-grown terrorists could seek to implement similar plans, perhaps even in response to this order. It is ironic that most of the terrorists responsible for 9/11 were Saudis not covered by the ban, while other terrorist actions were committed by persons from Chechnya or Pakistan, neither of which were covered by the ban. It appears that only 11 out of 180 terrorists since 9/11 came from the countries covered in the president’s EO. Citizen attacks were far more common. What’s more, the incidence of terrorism from refugees in the United States is less than one in 3.64 billion per year, and it is even smaller for illegal immigrants, at one in 10.9 billion per year. The decision, therefore, to order an indefinite suspension of entry of persons from Syria denies refuge to persons who are at greatest risk. In addition, it is unclear what gain there is to apply the refugee ban to people born in these countries who have for years been dual nationals, traveling on British or Canadian passports.

Trump uses exaggerated rhetoric when he cries out “we don’t want ‘em here,” referring to radical Islamic terrorists. Sadly, his proposal does nothing to respond to the homegrown terrorist threats that could increase as a result of the obvious anti-Muslim tone of these orders. It is good that Christians from the seven targeted nations may well be allowed in, but it is dangerous, even scandalous, to keep Muslims out when they have also been persecuted. It is doubly so for those who aided the United States in its own war efforts in the Middle East. Trump speaks as if the only people who will be kept out are “foreign nationals who intend to commit terrorist attacks in the United States.” But sadly, his position exposes innocent people to a heightened risk of terrorism in their home countries.

The case is every bit as weak for the president’s order to build a nearly 2,000-mile wall with Mexico, and then seek to charge the costs back to that country. Illegal immigration from Mexico has been down, not up, in recent years, as better conditions in Mexico (and worse ones in the United States) have led to a decline by about 58 percent between the 2003-2007 period and the 2008-2012 one. Why these numbers portend some crisis that justifies the construction of a leaky wall that one can dig under, fly over, or walk through on a visa is beyond comprehension.

And the thought that Mexico can be bullied into paying for the wall is a political delusion, backed by faulty economic analysis. A 20 percent tariff on Mexican goods, which the White House has floated, ignores the simple fact that some portion of that tariff is passed back to American citizens in the form of higher prices, assuming they can afford to buy these goods at all. It is also blind to the risk of retaliation that Mexico could impose on American efforts to sell or travel to that country. Right now, the president’s pro-growth domestic program has boosted the stock market. But the risk of a trade war could wipe out those economic gains as it eats away at the moral fiber of the country.

A similar analysis applies to the effort to ferret out illegal aliens in dozens of sanctuary cities. These cities do not offer protection to individuals that commit criminal offenses. But they do offer help to illegal aliens whose only offense is being in this country. Once again, the question is, why extend the net so widely when the very success of the American economy in many locations depends on contributions from undocumented workers who pay income, sales, property, and Social Security taxes, even though they may turn out to be short-termers? In dealing with these vexing issues, it is critical for the president to get some buy-in from immigrant groups who stoutly oppose him. By acting unilaterally, he has already stirred up a storm of protest, without having the foggiest notion of its long-term social consequences.

The obvious next question is, what, if anything, can be done to stop the president in the days, months, and years to come? The first step should be a sharp rebuke from Congress in the form of a refusal to appropriate any funds for the construction of the wall with Mexico, or to carry out any other executive order, which should be doable on a combination of policy and fiscal grounds. The great advantage of this route is it puts Trump on the defensive, and buys time for a more thoughtful approach to these problems.

Short of that, there is a great temptation to seek constitutional remedies to deal with these matters. The bad news on this front is that the culture of overly broad administrative deference is particularly strong with issues of immigration and entry into the United States. One example of an attack that will not work is that suggested by my University of Chicago colleagues, Professors Daniel Hemel, Jonathan Masur, and Eric Posner. Rightly appalled by the mindless Trump EO, they have made the tantalizing suggestion that the ghost of Antonin Scalia could block construction of the wall. The point of their article is that Trump cannot proceed under the Secure Fence Act of 2006, which authorizes the Secretary of Homeland Security to “take all actions the Secretary determines necessary and appropriate to achieve and maintain operational control over the entire international land and maritime borders of the United States.” In their view, the words “necessary and appropriate” forbid a wall that produces only trivial benefits in exchange for large costs. Scalia’s opinion in Michigan v. EPA, which they cite for this conclusion, does not bear that weight. Over the dissent of the four liberal justices (who, by their reasoning in this case, would have to bless the wall), Scalia rejected a power plant regulation that imposed $9.6 billion in annual costs for identifiable benefits between $4 and $6 million per year—clearly an absurd result of any cost-benefit analysis.

Yet two features of this case stand out. First, it only stood for the proposition that the government cannot wholly “disregard” costs in making its judgment, even if, as he accepts, the government receives “capacious” deference under Chevron in executing any particular statutory command. The Trump analysis, in contrast, makes an elaborate if unpersuasive case of the high costs of continued immigration, starting with an assumption that some wall is necessary and then leaving it to the Secretary to decide how to execute on the program. I have no doubt that Scalia would have gritted his teeth by holding this a permissible delegation, which, under the current toothless non-delegation doctrine, it surely is.

The constitutional questions are harder to resolve for the EO on sanctuary cities, which holds that the executive branch will “ensure that jurisdictions that fail to comply with applicable Federal law do not receive Federal funds, except as mandated by law.” This turns out to be a tall order, fraught with constitutional and operational difficulties, even if it is widely accepted that federal law preempts state law under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution on matters relating to the status of aliens, legal and illegal, in the United States. The first point is one of simple logistics: The covered states and cities receive massive funds for all sorts for purposes wholly unrelated to the immigrant problem. It is inconceivable that any President would be so foolish as to cut out any and all discretionary funding on matters of education, health care, the environment, and more. Second, there is a genuine constitutional puzzle over what it means to “fail to comply with applicable Federal law.” The famous 1997 Scalia opinion in Printz v. United States held that it was unconstitutional for the federal government to command state and local law enforcement officials to perform background checks on persons applying to use guns. The theory was that this enforcement encroached on the reserved powers of the state as protected by the Tenth Amendment.

It thus becomes clear that the United States cannot press state and local police officers to arrest persons on its instructions. But, by the same token, Printz does not allow state and local police to throw federal immigration officials off the scent by giving them false information about their whereabouts. Yet there is a large gray middle that defies easy resolution under current law. If the state officials receive notice that federal immigration authorities want to collect a person known to be in custody, may the state release that person before the federal officials have a chance to do the apprehension? Must they open the cell door? If not, can the federal officials break the door down? It is not possible to administer any law in which actions involved in the transfer of custody from state to federal officials raises difficult issues that could be litigated ad nauseam in courts around the country.

The President is horribly off base when he thinks that he is responding to an immigration and refugee crisis, which his petty, unwise, and precipitous actions have inflamed. On these issues, he should heed this simple advice: back off, or resign, or both, before it is too late.

http://www.hoover.org/research/trumps-immigration-insanity

Published in Domestic Policy, Immigration
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  1. Jamie Lockett Member
    Jamie Lockett
    @JamieLockett

    Misthiocracy (View Comment):

    Richard Epstein: Illegal immigration from Mexico has been down, not up, in recent years…

    … and they just happened to start falling when the original border fence was erected.

    Given these numbers, there seems to be little need for an 85ft high concrete wall along the entire border, but closing the gaps of fencing along the Rio Grande certainly wouldn’t hurt.

    That also coincides with the slowing down of the US Economy. Repeat after me: correlation is not causation.

    • #31
  2. Kwhopper Inactive
    Kwhopper
    @Kwhopper

    Jamie Lockett (View Comment):

    Misthiocracy (View Comment):

    Richard Epstein: Illegal immigration from Mexico has been down, not up, in recent years…

    … and they just happened to start falling when the original border fence was erected.

    Given these numbers, there seems to be little need for an 85ft high concrete wall along the entire border, but closing the gaps of fencing along the Rio Grande certainly wouldn’t hurt.

    That also coincides with the slowing down of the US Economy. Repeat after me: correlation is not causation.

    Umm, correlation is not causation. The economy tanked from the 2008 mortgage debacle.

    • #32
  3. Jamie Lockett Member
    Jamie Lockett
    @JamieLockett

    Kwhopper (View Comment):

    Jamie Lockett (View Comment):

    Misthiocracy (View Comment):

    Richard Epstein: Illegal immigration from Mexico has been down, not up, in recent years…

    … and they just happened to start falling when the original border fence was erected.

    Given these numbers, there seems to be little need for an 85ft high concrete wall along the entire border, but closing the gaps of fencing along the Rio Grande certainly wouldn’t hurt.

    That also coincides with the slowing down of the US Economy. Repeat after me: correlation is not causation.

    Umm, correlation is not causation. The economy tanked from the 2008 mortgage debacle.

    Working tangentially in the financial industry I can attest that the effects were beginning to be felt prior to the collapse of Lehman in 2008 (that was just the first public debacle). Things were felt as far back as early 2007 and the line in that particular graph is rather unspecific as to the exact date it represents.

    • #33
  4. Keith Preston Member
    Keith Preston
    @

    Jamie Lockett (View Comment):

    Misthiocracy (View Comment):

    Richard Epstein: Illegal immigration from Mexico has been down, not up, in recent years…

    … and they just happened to start falling when the original border fence was erected.

    Given these numbers, there seems to be little need for an 85ft high concrete wall along the entire border, but closing the gaps of fencing along the Rio Grande certainly wouldn’t hurt.

    That also coincides with the slowing down of the US Economy. Repeat after me: correlation is not causation.

    But it also coincides with the election of President “OllyOllyinComeFree”

    • #34
  5. Misthiocracy Member
    Misthiocracy
    @Misthiocracy

    Jamie Lockett (View Comment):

    Misthiocracy (View Comment):

    Richard Epstein: Illegal immigration from Mexico has been down, not up, in recent years…

    … and they just happened to start falling when the original border fence was erected.

    Given these numbers, there seems to be little need for an 85ft high concrete wall along the entire border, but closing the gaps of fencing along the Rio Grande certainly wouldn’t hurt.

    That also coincides with the slowing down of the US Economy. Repeat after me: correlation is not causation.

    Clearly the cost of the fencing is what hurt the economy.

    • #35
  6. Hypatia Member
    Hypatia
    @

    See, this is what I don’t get.  If some innocent people who  “only “want to vacation, work,study, etc., in our country can’t come in–SO WHAT?  I mean, we regret any inconvenience and all, but until we figure out a better vetting system, they’ll just have to do those things somewhere else.

    It is so obvious that the people in charge of alien entry screening in our country have no idea what they’re doing–and under Omega, were actually instructed NOT to investigate the most accessible info about new entrants (like the Facebook posts of the Bloody Bride of San Bernardino).

    Another  thing: just the fact that we may ALSO  be vulnerable to “home-grown” terror (which often means the born-here spawn of someone who never shoulda been admitted, like Omar Mateen)  is no reason why we shouldn’t try to stop importing it.

    And what would have been the point of taking this measure at all if we announced it a month or so in advance?  Common sense, please!

    (Actually, Trump did announce it well in advance–it’s just that the terrorists and their useful idiots on the Left were so sure he could never win…)

    I am 100% behind this measure.  From what I’ve read, the only reason some courts issued stays was on behalf of persons who already submitted to our jurisdiction, so who might arguably have rights to due process.  Which, btw, all of them received!

    No, stop trying to undermine our new president.  He has  authority under federal statute to do exactly what he did. 8 USC 1182(f).

    oh, and Mexico can’t be made to pay for the wall?  I think they can: tax remittances.  In response to my recent post on IRS collaboration with illegal aliens, @pettyboozswha  aptly informed us that Oklahoma taxes remittances and gets 13 million in revenue from it.  When citizens or other legal workers file their tax returns, they get a credit for the amount.  So only illegals pay.  If, as I’ve read, 26 billion $$ annually is bled out of our economy and transfused to Mexico’s, a tax on remittances could pay for the wall in a couple of years.

    • #36
  7. Carol Member
    Carol
    @

    drlorentz (View Comment):
    Richard Epstein: A similar analysis applies to the effort to ferret out illegal aliens in dozens of sanctuary cities. These cities do not offer protection to individuals that commit criminal offenses. But they do offer help to illegal aliens whose only offense is being in this country.

    Mr. Epstein is flat wrong about this. In the Kate Steinle case in San Fran, for one example, the sheriff refused to hold a seven time felon for ICE. He then shot and killed a young woman.

    Edit: I see many beat me to this.  Here is another, from Massachusetts – driving drunk, with his 6 year old in the car, he hit and killed a young man on a motorcycle ( and backed over him):

    “Guaman was an undocumented immigrant who had previously been arrested for breaking and entering. And if he had been deported when he was arrested the first time back in 2008, her son might still be alive.

    “Nothing is going to bring Matthew back. We are just hoping to get Gauman the longest sentence we can get for him and then after he serves his jail time here that he be deported,” she said.”  http://www.wbur.org/news/2014/05/07/nicolas-guaman-milford-crash-trial

    • #37
  8. Carol Member
    Carol
    @

    Brian Watt (View Comment):

    And didn’t the Obama Administration flex their muscles to declare that the Federal Government has primacy in enforcing immigration rules back in the day? He set the precedent there.

    Yep. Eric Holder (that paragon of justice) sued the State of Arizona, as I recall, on that very point. Now, he’s been hired by the State of California to contradict his earlier position.

    Oh, good point! Must remember for future.

    • #38
  9. Front Seat Cat Member
    Front Seat Cat
    @FrontSeatCat

    From what I understand, Homeland Security supported it as well as the Trump security team. Also, the lead security person for Dubai, a Muslim, gave his approval. The Trump team said “they did not announce it, earlier as they did not want to tip their hat”. That to me, means Trump was privy to classified information that required action.

    On the contrary, Trudeau of Canada said come here and there was a terrorist attack at a mosque in Quebec. The Imam was weeping.  I ask you – how many more candlelight vigils do we need before things change?

    I also ask did Syrians have a country before Obama – were they fleeing at the rate they had to  during Bush?

    On another note, Mexico – the drugs, gangs, beheadings on the border, Korans being found, immigrants being paid to cross with drugs? My sister lives in a Po-dunk mountain town in Maryland, picturesque, Amish country, Washington slept here signs – lots of history – the Potomac. There were six heroin deaths over the weekend – it’s become the norm along with suicides and homeless.

    Let’s give something else a try and rescue our beloved country.

    • #39
  10. LibertyDefender Member
    LibertyDefender
    @LibertyDefender

    Richard Epstein:

    Once again, the question is, why extend the net so widely when the very success of the American economy in many locations depends on contributions from undocumented workers who pay income, sales, property, and Social Security taxes, even though they may turn out to be short-termers?

    Hoyacon: This is likely the weakest argument that I’ve read (or heard) from Prof. Epstein, even granting the open borders bent of those of the libertarian persuasion. …

    And, unfortunately, there is no discussion about the rule of law. Yes, there are arguments of convenience (and found in the Wall St. Journal) about illegals’ tax payments and contributions to the economy. These amount to “it’s better that we ignore the law.” But Professor’s Epstein’s use of the phrase “only offense” is telling as to his respect for immigration law. So why not allow the cities to ignore it? And why, pray tell, not seek “buy-in” from groups who have proven themselves incapable of buy-in?

    Mark Krikorian, call your office.  Any illegal immigrant who is paying income, property, and Social Security taxes is committing several crimes in addition to violations of immigration laws, e.g.. identity theft, signing false documents under penalty of perjury.

    • #40
  11. Guruforhire Inactive
    Guruforhire
    @Guruforhire

    I am going to chalk this one up to a garbage in garbage out problem.

    • #41
  12. Duane Oyen Member
    Duane Oyen
    @DuaneOyen

    drlorentz (View Comment):

    Richard Epstein: A similar analysis applies to the effort to ferret out illegal aliens in dozens of sanctuary cities. These cities do not offer protection to individuals that commit criminal offenses. But they do offer help to illegal aliens whose only offense is being in this country.

    The term sanctuary city is not well-defined but it is generally understood to include refusing to cooperate with federal immigration officials in enforcing the law of the United States. I’m not an expert in federal-local law enforcement relations but it’s my impression that the general rule is that the law enforcement agencies at the various levels of government cooperate with each other to uphold the rule of law.I’m surprised that Mr Epstein would be hostile to this concept. Presumably, there’s no uncertainty that exclusive federal jurisdiction on the matter of immigration is unquestioned.*

    Are there other instances (besides weed, another interesting exception) of local and federal authorities are at odds in this way?

    …..

    Richard needs to get over his high dudgeon on this one.  I don’t know what city he goes to,  but it is not at all clear that the conduct of the local officials is as pristine as he assumes. In Minneapolis, it seemed as though crimes committed by undocumented people were all treated as though they were only immigration offenses.  How about welfare fraud?  Can the Feds expect help there?

    • #42
  13. RightyFeep Inactive
    RightyFeep
    @RightyFeep

    “The first facilitates the entry of people into the United States who ought not to be here. The second excludes entry from the United States of people who should be here.”

    The notion that there are people that “should be here” supposes that people who are not Americans have some kind of right to become Americans. That is simply untrue. The opportunity to become an American is a gift, not a right.

    • #43
  14. RightyFeep Inactive
    RightyFeep
    @RightyFeep

    “but a wholesale ban seems to be wildly overbroad given the multiple ways in which home-grown terrorists could seek to implement similar plans, perhaps even in response to this order.”

    At first, I considered this to be utterly irrelevant. An EO directed at one problem cannot be fairly criticized by reference to a different problem it does not address. Nor should we preemptively surrender to a hypothetical threat from terrorists in reaction to the EO.

    But then I realized that the EO might well prevent the entry of parents of future “homegrown terrorists” – which means that to the extent the criticism is relevant, it’s wrong.

    • #44
  15. Jamie Lockett Member
    Jamie Lockett
    @JamieLockett

    RightyFeep (View Comment):
    “The first facilitates the entry of people into the United States who ought not to be here. The second excludes entry from the United States of people who should be here.”

    The notion that there are people that “should be here” supposes that people who are not Americans have some kind of right to become Americans. That is simply untrue. The opportunity to become an American is a gift, not a right.

    Permanent Residents have every right to be here. That’s how Permanent Residency works.

    • #45
  16. Dorrk Inactive
    Dorrk
    @Dorrk

    Ever since the election, I’ve been hearing that people of color living in America are fearing for their very lives, but now the Left is outraged that fewer immigrants are being allowed to move here?

    If anything, Trump should be a contender for the Nobel Peace Prize for selflessly protecting thousands of potential victims from the Holocaust-level event that we are constantly told is the very purpose of his administration.

    • #46
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