I could root for the immigration bill to become law just to see if Congress can get anything done. But that’s not a strong enough reason - especially when jobs are at stake. Amid the earliest start to a presidential campaign in anyone’s memory, bruising rhetoric on talk shows and in the (often wacky) blogosphere, comes word that employers are unhappy with the bill and a research study out of Canada that suggests immigration undercuts wages of unskilled workers in North America.
“The tendency for the supply of immigrant labor to the United States to be concentrated among low-skilled workers served to depress the wages of workers in the lowest skill groups,” reports a Canadian journal, citing a new Statistics Canada study. “Coupled with only a small dampening effect of immigration on the wages of highly-skilled workers, who saw their real weekly wages increase by 20% in the United States between 1980 and 2000, immigration served to magnify growth in US wage inequality between low-skilled and high-skilled workers over the same period.”
You mean a rising tide of salaries doesn’t lift all ships? An interesting finding, but it won’t change the debate. What’s happening now is pure, partisan hardball.
“It is less a bill than a big dirty ball of mischief, malfeasance and mendacity, with a touch of class malice, and it’s being pushed by a White House that is at once cynical and inept,” writes Peggy Noonan, the former Bush senior speech writer, who can turn a phrase better than she analyzes a bill.






