Memo From Mexico, By
Allan Wall
Mexicans Outraged - Americans Intervene In Own Affairs!
A recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling has
inadvertently prevented Mexican President
Vicente Fox from taking yet another
immigration-boosting trip to the United States.
Boo hoo.
The ruling was handed down
March 27th and stated that an illegal
alien had no right to back pay. [Supreme
Court Oral Argument,
Decision PDF] This of course threw the Mexican elite
into a tizzy of self-righteous indignation. How dare the
gringos do anything to limit the rights of illegal
Mexican immigrants!
Mexican pundit Carlos Montemayor went so far as to
declare that the Supreme Court decision transformed
Mexican illegal aliens into “the new slaves of the 21st
century and the third millennium.”
Apparently nobody, but nobody, in the next thousand
years will have it so bad as Mexican illegals in the
United States. (Where they can bring lawsuits,
remember?)
A formal protest was lodged by the
Mexican Embassy in Washington:
“The Mexican Embassy in
Washington expresses its concern for the consequences of
the U.S. Supreme Court decision for the undocumented
migrants [a.k.a.
illegal aliens]
who.... contribute to the growth and competitivity of
the U.S. economy.”
Whether Mexican immigration as now constituted really
does contribute to the U.S. economy is, of course,
highly
questionable. Yet another study recently affirmed
that it is a
net drain.
But the “contribution argument” is utilized by the elite
of both countries to justify the present immigration
situation.
What really worries Mexico’s governmental elites is
that emigration to the United States, whether legal or
illegal, might be diminished. That’s because emigration
to the United States is Mexico’s economic
program. That was true of the
former PRI government and it's true of the Fox
government. The difference is that Fox is more
aggressive in promoting it. Recently Fox himself,
speaking on an American news program in English,
went so far to
declare that Mexican illegal aliens “are not
illegals.”
The Mexican government closely monitors U.S.
immigration legislation and litigation. It has already
carried out some
successful meddling in U.S. politics in order to
keep the gates open.
Mexico’s biggest
labor union, the
Congreso del Trabajo also protested the U.S. Supreme
Court’s decision. It was unfair, declared the Congreso
del Trabajo, that Mexican illegal aliens do not have the
same rights as other workers in the United States. The
labor union demanded that the Fox administration
“intervene” (as if Fox is not intervening enough
already) to protect illegal aliens in the United States
and to demand an “unconditional amnesty” for illegal
aliens as well as the right to vote.
What, by the way, has the Congreso del Trabajo done
for Mexican workers in Mexico? Better not to ask
that question, I guess, they have more important things
to worry about.
Mexico’s opposition parties attacked Fox for failing
to protect
Mexicans in the United States. It’s not that Fox and
the opposition disagree on the basic strategy. Both Fox
and the opposition encourage mass emigration and
continued meddling in
internal U.S. politics. All major Mexican political
parties are in agreement there.
What’s at stake are bragging rights and political
advantage. Both sides desire to prove that their side is
the one who is fighting the hardest for the rights of
Mexicans in the United States. And in the midst of the
struggle, neither side is proposing any real reform to
the
Mexican economy that would make Mexico more
prosperous. They are still mired in the “emigration as a
solution” mindset.
But the opposition found a way to hit Fox where it
hurts–they denied Fox the right to travel on his latest
foray into the United States.
On technical constitutional grounds, the opposition
is in the right. According to
Section 88 of the Mexican Constitution, “The
President of the Republic may not absent himself from
the national territory without the permission of
Congress....”
The opposition gave several reasons for denying Fox
the right to this particular trip. But the principal one
was that Fox had not defended Mexicans forcefully
enough. According the Senator Silvia Hernandez of
Mexico’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Fox was
denied permission because his administration has not
suitably defended the human rights of Mexicans in the
United States. She went on to bring up the March 27th
U.S. Supreme Court decision.
Fox responded by making a short
televised speech to the nation. (!)
In the
address, Fox laid out his agenda for the scheduled
trip and defended it as a means of fighting for Mexicans
in the United States. With typical Foxian rhetoric, he
accused his enemies of being people who “do not desire
Mexico to progress.” The trip’s cancellation, said Fox, “has negative effects for the promotion of Mexico’s
interests and of Mexicans who reside in those two
countries.” (There are now also some
Mexicans in Canada.)
According to Fox, the trip had two main objectives.
The second was to promote investment in, and business
with, Mexico. Fair enough. But the first objective of
the visit, said Fox, was
“to strengthen the
programs of protection of Mexicans abroad
regardless of their migratory status.”
In other words, as Fox said before, it doesn’t matter
if they are legal or illegal immigrants.
Part of Fox’s plan for both San Francisco and Seattle
was
“to meet with communities of
Mexicans to launch the new Mexican consular card and
promote its acceptance in other regions of the United
States.”
The Mexican consular card to which Fox refers is a
higher-tech version of the document Mexican consulates
distribute to illegal aliens, explicitly to avoid
their deportation from the United States.
As for the Supreme Court decision, Fox defended
himself by stating that
“I desired to establish
in an unequivocal manner the position and concern of
Mexico regarding the ruling of the Supreme Court of the
United States against the Mexican Jose Castro, and
potentially, of many other fellow Mexicans....”
No mention here, of course, that Jose Castro was an
illegal alien who committed document fraud to acquire
his employment. But Fox went on....
“The objective was to do
so directly in the United States and in two crucial
states for the
Hispanic vote....
So Fox directly declares to the Mexican people that
he sees the
Hispanic vote in U.S. elections as a tool of
Mexican foreign policy.
Meanwhile, back in Mexico, Fox’s domestic program is
stalled. No substantive free-market reformas are
forthcoming, or even proposed. Mexico’s elite, both Fox
and the opposition, continue to use emigration as
substitute for real reform. And they are openly meddling
in
internal U.S. politics seeking to gain influence
over immigration policy.
The real question though is, what will our own
leaders do? If we had a sensible immigration policy,
which was actually enforced, it simply wouldn’t matter
what the Mexican President and the opposition said to
each other.
Who knows, they might even have to seriously work
together for the good of
Mexicans in Mexico.
Imagine that!
Allan Wall is an
American citizen who has lived and worked in
Mexico since 1991. Presently employed as an
English instructor, Allan has legal permission
from the Mexican government to live and work in
Mexico under the rubric of an FM-2 migration
document. His VDARE.COM articles are archived
here;
his Frontpage.com articles are archived
here. Allan Wall
welcomes questions or comments (pro or con) at
allan39@prodigy.net.mx.
April 12, 2002