Newsline: April 2006
Teamsters Union Urges "Responsible Immigration Legislation"
As President Bush toured the ancient Mayan ruins at Chichen Itza with Mexican President Vicente Fox and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and the U.S. Senate continued a fiery debate for stringent curbs on immigration, the Teamsters Union issued its own call to both sides for “responsible immigration legislation.”
“As the three North American leaders continue their summit,” IBT General President James P. Hoffa said, “They risk creating an entirely new set of ruins as they discuss drastic changes in immigration policy.” He warned against the Senate rushing through legislation that “includes a number of seriously
flawed provisions.
“While our current immigration system is clearly broken, the Senate is heading down a course that will only make the situation worse. Most egregious is Majority Leader Bill Frist’s proposal to criminalize millions of immigrants and anyone who assists them — from priests to doctors to union organizers.”
The Teamsters, Hoffa said, “does support measures passed by the Senate Judiciary Committee that include smart border security measures, as well as earned legalization for the 12 million undocumented workers in the country who are essential to our economy and communities.
“The Committee’s inclusion of the Agricultural Job Opportunities, Benefits, and Security (AgJOBS) Act of 2005 and the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act in its package also marked a step in the right direction. I applaud the Committee members for their hard and tireless work on
the legislation and, in particular, Senator Specter for his leadership.
“However, the Teamsters union remains deeply concerned about continued discussions — both in Cancun and Washington — of an expanded new guest worker program which would allow millions of new guest workers to enter the country. This proposal is tantamount to government sanctioned indentured servitude for workers, whose rights and livelihoods would be left in the hands of their employers.
“Earlier this year, with the disastrous implementation of the Medicare prescription program, we saw what happens when profits trump people in the creation of public policy. Congress and the President should make sure that they do not repeat this mistake as they overhaul our nation’s immigration laws.”
Last month, millions of immigrants living illegally in the United States demonstrated in several cities, including New York and Los Angeles to protest proposed federal legislation that would put them out of their homes and jobs and put them in jail for not being legal residents.
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