5 Immigration and America's Racial Reckoning - Politics Information

Immigration and America's Racial Reckoning


By Jonette Christian


The Civil Rights Movement was America's greatest moral crusade, the culmination of years of determined citizen activism, leading to radical changes in the 1960s. And we didn't just settle for a level playing field. We embraced affirmative action, expanded anti-poverty programs, rewrote history books, renamed public buildings, erected new statues, and promoted talented Black people in journalism, sports and Hollywood. Multiple Black mayors, city councilors and police chiefs were elected.

Black incomes grew after World War I, and the Black-white wage gap narrowed until around 1970. This remarkable achievement was mostly accomplished in the face of Jim Crow laws, and with minimal help from white people.

In the ensuing half-century, the gap widened to 1950 levels. What happened?

A new book, "Back of the Hiring Line" by Roy Beck, offers a meticulously documented perspective on this national puzzle. Along with employment data and immigration and labor historians, Beck tells the story through the writings and speeches of prominent Black leaders such as Booker T. Washington, Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois, A. Phillip Randolph, and Black-owned newspapers, all of whom doggedly advocated for tight labor policies following the Civil War.

Finally, a mounting demand by Black and labor activists forced Congress to cut immigration numbers in half in 1924. The Great Wave ended. Blacks began migrating North to fill blue-collar jobs in factories deprived of European workers.

During this half-century of tight labor, wages increased, wealth disparities shrank, the middle class exploded, and Black average incomes skyrocketed. Employers were forced to hire and train from within, and negotiate with unions for pensions, cost of living wages, and health care.

But, in 1965, Congress changed course again, radically expanding annual immigration numbers. Since 1990 Congress, placating the tech lobby, has given away millions of high-paying tech jobs through guest worker programs. The demand for foreign workers is unending. This February, the House passed the America Competes Act, expanding yet again foreign worker visas.

With the surge in foreign workers, some employers tended to prefer immigrants who were willing to accept long hours and lower wages. Blacks were shafted in one industry after another where previously employed. They also missed out on entry-level jobs in technology, losing the opportunity to develop those skills, networks and work experience that lead to upward mobility and generational wealth.

Blacks earn one in 10 computer science degrees nationwide, but account for only 2.6% of Silicon Valley tech workers. Seventy-one percent of tech workers in Silicon Valley today are foreign-born.

In the 1990s, Congress authorized the formation of the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform. After seven years of study, the commission told Congress to significantly decrease immigration, setting an annual cap of 550,000. The current level of immigration is over one million annually. Congress ignored the experts they had chosen to consult, and set immigration numbers to please business lobbies wanting more workers and more consumers. And the clamor for more foreign labor continues.

Immigration numbers have played a largely unrecognized role in forcing vulnerable groups to compete against each other, and Blacks have been especially harmed. The solution is simple: Congress should reduce the numbers. All workers, immigrant and native-born, would benefit from tighter labor markets and higher wages.

Jonette Christian is a founder of Mainers for Sensible Immigration Policy. This piece originally ran in the Lewiston Sun-Journal

More Resources


11/22/2024
Mighty Casey Has Struck Out
Democrat Bob Casey Jr. has served in public office in this state since taking the oath of office as the state auditor general in 1997.

more info


11/22/2024
Gaetz's Implosion Shows Resistance Is Not Futile
Trump's first nominations reveal the serious fractures in his coalition - which can be used to weaken him

more info


11/22/2024
Building a Better Ground Game Critical to Trump's Victory
American Majority Action turned out low-participation voters in battleground States to help Trump and fellow Republicans to victory.

more info


11/22/2024
The Myth That Could Cost Democrats the Next Election
Progressives staying home (almost certainly) didn't cost Kamala Harris the election.

more info


11/22/2024
Jussie Smollett, the Chicago Way and MAGA


more info


11/22/2024
It's Over--Somebody Needs To Tell Bragg's Office


more info


11/22/2024
Congress Must Seize Post-Chevron Opportunity


more info


11/22/2024
Former NIH Director Francis Collins on Trump, RFK Jr.


more info


11/22/2024
How the Left Betrayed the Jews


more info


11/22/2024
I Mean, Seriously Jaguar?
In the aftermath of Trump's victory, the ad already looks like a period piece. But aside from that - I mean, seriously? says Guardian columnist Marina Hyde

more info


11/22/2024
November 22, 1963: JFK and the Futility of Blame


more info


11/22/2024
Dems Have Lost the Plot in the View of Working-Class Voters
The road back to the working class.

more info


11/22/2024
The Trump Counterrevolution Is a Return to Sanity
We are witnessing a historic counterrevolution after Trump's victory, far different from his first election in 2016.

more info


11/22/2024
Harris Disappointed Gen Z
Trump made gains among young voters in 2024, leaving Democrats wondering why.

more info


11/22/2024
Democrats Need Their Own Donald Trump
There may be five stages of grief, but there's usually just one when it comes to political defeat - pretend to soul-search, then carry on as if nothing happened.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Armstrong Williams: Giving Back to the Industry He Loves
There's something to be said for the media gurus who immerse themselves in the whole industry.
Cut Low-Skilled Immigration to RAISE American Wages
The Senate could soon vote to give millions of Americans their biggest pay-raise in decades.
Trump undoes regulatory over-reach
President Trump is slowly but surely dismantling the "mare's nest" of regulations imposed by the Obama administration, says Dan Weber, president of the Association of Mature American Citizens.
Problems with a Carbon Tax
While President Donald Trump wants to cut taxes, there are others who hope to raise them -- by taxing carbon.
President Trump said, "They Are Losers"
President Trump has renamed terrorists from monsters to losers. I agree. People such as 22 year old Salmon Abedi who contrive to inflict such a heinous act as the carnage he recently inflicted in Manchester, England, is the worst of pathetic world losers.
The Fine Print on Pipelines Isn't Scary
Have you heard? Transporting oil through pipelines is a threat to humanity! The many accidents highlighted in the press speak for themselves.
President Needs to Tell the Ethanol Industry: You're Fired
President Donald Trump changed his mind on many issues since taking office -- China is no longer a currency manipulator and NATO is an important institution. So there's still hope he'll dump the renewable fuel standard (RFS).
Don't Play Favorites for Nuclear Energy
While critics bemoan President Trumps decision to pull out of -- or renegotiate -- the Paris climate agreement, the United States has been reducing its greenhouse gas emissions over the past decade. And now the country is poised to help a number of the signatory countries reduce theirs as well.
Should President Trump Quit?
Should President Donald Trump quit? A large percentage of Americans voted against him and continue to dislike him. About all of the Democrats in Congress are against him and there are certainly Republicans who aren't Trump fans. I was recently in France and there are plenty of people in that country who mock Trump. I would wager transgender people in the military don't like him. The protestors who show up wherever he is to protest, some of them paid to do so, don't like him.
Afghanistan - The End Is Not In Sight
October will mark the 16th year since President George W. Bush announced the first strikes against Afghanistan. In June 2010 we surpassed Vietnam as the longest conflict in U.S. history.
Don't Sanction Americans for Russia's Misdeeds
President Trump just signed a Russian sanctions bill into law -- and in doing so, narrowly avoided an economic catastrophe. Thanks to modifications to the bill's language by the House, Americans can rest easy knowing their economic future is protected.
Survey Says... Offshore Seismic is Safe
Late last month, Delaware Senators Tom Carper and Chris Coons released a statement opposing seismic surveying in the Atlantic Ocean. Their worry is that preparatory drilling work for oil and natural gas below the ocean floor would negatively impact marine life.
Changing Medicare Would Threaten Hispanics' Health
Hispanics are fifty percent more likely than whites to die from diabetes and liver disease.
A Money-Back Guarantee for Prescription Drugs
President Trump will soon issue an executive order to lower drug prices. The order likely will encourage federal health agencies to make greater use of "outcomes-based" contracts.
Requiring U.S.-Made Steel in Pipelines Would Backfire
President Trump has a plan to revive the steel industry. He wants to mandate that oil and natural gas pipelines use only American-made steel. His Commerce Department is finalizing the plan right now.
A poppy flower, red as blood, may help us acknowledge the new wars being fought in our own backyards
The world was a dangerous place during World War I. It was even more dangerous during World War II. And, it was frightening enough during the Cold War that ensued.
Democrats Dig for Russians and Uncover Environmentalists
Democrats and the media have been on a yearlong deep dig into Russian involvement into U.S. elections. But when you dig a hole you sometimes run across things you wish had remained buried—like the dirt pointing to Russian ties to the U.S. environmental movement.
The Energy Industry is Stepping up in the Wake of Hurricane Harvey
Hurricane Harvey struck the heart of America's energy sector. Greater Houston is home to dozens of refineries, pipelines, and petrochemical plants.
Taking Back Renewable Energy's Taxpayer-Funded Honeypot
The renewable energy industry exists because of government mandates and taxpayer subsidies.
The Political Intrigue of 1968—Fifty Years and Counting
My political interests were sparked at age 11, half a century ago, during one of the most interesting campaign seasons in recent American history. In my home we had neither a newspaper nor a news magazine. Our television reception was unreliable. Yet the stories were compelling. The favorite part of my day occurred when my bus arrived at school. I had 10 minutes to rush to the library and read the morning's editorials. Who knew I would be writing op-ed pieces as a hobby 50 years later?