Immigration politics

The president took to the airwaves last night, but not to talk about terrorism or the war in Iraq. This time — a first for his presidency — he made a domestic issue, immigration, the subject hoping to stop a revolt on his right flank without angering the business/corporate element of his party’s support base.

So we get some basic proposals: A guest worker program, a path for some who are here already to gain legal status, an increase in the number of border agents with the National Guard being temporarily deployed until the agents can be brought on board.

The New York Times rightly called the speech “a victory for the fear-stricken fringe of the debate. “

“Rather than standing up for truth,” it wrote, “Mr. Bush swiveled last night in the direction of those who see immigration, with delusional clarity, as entirely a problem of barricades and bad guys.”

Ultimately, Amy M. Traub, associate director of research for the Drum Major Institute for Public Policy, says the speech “was more about politics than policy.” Writing on Tom Paine, she said the president managed to spend 20 minutes on immigration policy without offering “a genuinely workable solution to the nation’s immigration problems.” Instead,

“President Bush sought to pacify a wide range of restive political constituencies — from the conservative base feeling threatened both economically and culturally by increased immigration, to the big businesses eager to maintain and expand access to a supply of cheap and exploitable labor, to a Latino electorate wary of a Republican party that looks increasingly willing to sell them out. As a result, the president’s grab-bag of policy half-measures is likely to end up satisfying no one.”

The problem, as she sees it, is that militarizing and further criminalizing the situation will do little more than exacerbate the problems that already exist. And the guest worker programs is only likely to institutionalize the downward pressures on wages created by the current influx of lower-wage workers.

Her answer is trecognizeniz(e) the role unauthorized immigrants play in our economy while at the same time guaranteeing that they are afforded rights in the workplace to ensure that their wages and working conditions don’t undermine the rights and wages of all workers.”

I would like to add — as I wrote in my Cranbury Press Dispatches column two weeks ago — that the issue is not the immigrants themselves, but the current rules governing the global business community, rules that encourage businesses to cut costs — either by slashing wages or ignoring environmental problems — without any regard to their impact on the rest of the world.

Channel Surfing, The South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press

Stanley Kunitz, a great poet

The great American poet and former poet laureate Stanley Kunitz has died. I saw him read and discuss his work about 16 years ago (I think) at the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival and found him, even then in his 80s, to be a powerful presence. Rest in peace, Mr. Kunitz.

Read some of his work here.

Channel Surfing, The South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press

The Pucci panel

Monroe Mayor Richard Pucci’s proposal to create a “pilot program” to “establish new standards, ones that reach higher than the current law” is really nothing more than a way to save political face. The program is rather ephemeral, based on what he has told the paper so far, and is far from likely to lead to real reform. The mayor is correct when he says that public financing is needed (see my previous post), but that is out of Monroe’s hands. For now, he is putting the vague notion of “higher standards” on the table as he looks to the future — one likely to include his sixth mayoral campaign in 2007. Check out The Cranbury Press on Friday for a story and check The Press’ Web site for updates during the week.

Channel Surfing, The South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press

Jersey needs clean elections now

The Asbury Park Press on Saturday hit the nail on the head with its editorial on “clean elections” in New Jersey. As the editorial points out, the problems with the recent experiment in public financing were with the way the legislation was crafted, setting contribution thresholds that were too high and not providing equal funding for third-party candidates. Real campaign reform requires a real attempt at making public financing work — then, maybe, the tangle of connections that have ensnared Mayor Richard Pucci in Monroe might be prevented in the future. Read the full legislative committee report here.

Channel Surfing, The South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press

Against Isaiah

Not sure what to make of this news, but really, does it matter?

Larry Brown is not what’s wrong with the Knicks — or, at least, he’s not the only thing or even the most significant reason the team was a putrid 23-59.

The Knicks are bad because:

1. Isaiah Thomas has no plan and no patience. He understands young talent, but is too quick to pull the trigger on ill-advised trades and to change direction and to collect big names without a sense of how the parts might fit. So, the names change over and over and the team ends up with two coach-killer, no-defense, selfish point guards, a center with a world of talent and a bad rep and no work ethic, a mishmash of overpaid spare parts and a Hall-of-Fame coach who has no use for the players he must coach. Ugh.

2. James Dolan refuses to hold Isaiah Thomas accountable.(Thomas failed to lottery protect his first-round pick, which should be grounds for automatic dismissal.)

3. The players are not very good. Stephon Marbury and Steve Francis are the same player, selfish, no-defense types who like to shoot. Jalen Rose is over the hill and was vastly overrated when he wasn’t. Quentin Richardson, a nice role player on a good team, has no role here. Malik Rose is an over-the-hill role player without a role. Maurice Taylor is a contract waiting for expiration. Eddy Curry could be a star or a stiff; it’s up to him and how hard he is willing to work. I would take the three rookies, Jamaal Crawford and Curry, jettison the rest and see what happens.

4. Scott Layden’s legacy of bad decisions created a salary-cap hole so deep that even the best of GMs might not be able to extricate the Knicks, but Thomas has proven to be the worst of decision-makers.

At what point do the suits at Madison Square Garden realize that this is costing the organization real dollars and put a stop to it?

Channel Surfing, The South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press