Social
friction is not caused by the influx of workers from abroad. The
cause of that friction is in the inadequacies of the capitalist
system in its housing problems, its unplanned economy, in its
inherent poverty. Migrants may highlight these problems but the
problems are with us all the time. The Socialist
Party
condemns racial persecution and the exploitation of race hatred by
politicians. The Socialist Party does not think that unrestricted
immigration nor open borders would solve any working class problems,
any more than draconian immigration controls has done. We stand for a
social system in which human beings would be able to move freely all
over the earth and in which there will be none of the national
barriers of capitalism. The problems associated with large scale
migration of workers are problems of capitalism, which always needs a
mobile pool of unemployed, sometimes national and sometimes
international. And we should not forget that while some problems may
be associated with large scale immigration, others are associated
with large scale emigration. The main task before all workers of all
skin colours and nationalities is to abolish capitalism but while
capitalism lasts they must defend, and struggle to improve, their
living standards. These tasks can only be done in unity. when
"indigenous" and "newcomer" workers all recognise
that their interests are one against their common enemy, the
capitalist class. This fact may be obscured for some workers by
"patriotic loyalty" — a euphemism for prejudice — but
it is nevertheless valid. Capitalism has always exploited its workers
as best it can and its competition has always been cut-throat —
what other type can there be?
Not
everyone opposing immigration and deportation of “illegal”
migrants are racists. Many are but most of our co-workers aren’t
but rather confusion and angry. Demagogues are using the immigration
issue for political gain as they always have, tapping real fears
among native-born working people because of concerns about future
jobs and personal security. People change country for one primary
purpose – to work and earn a better living than is possible in
their home countries. This is true whether for the lowest paid worker
or the highly paid skilled worker. The driver is economics. Employers
seek cheaper labour. The employers are not those promoting more
restrictions. Stopping
immigration is not the objective. It is controlling the flow of
immigration. The expansion of legal visas provides a more reliable
and stable workforce. Another way to look at the immigration debate
is to see it as the flip side of outsourcing. Both allow employers to
get the skills they desire at the lowest cost – outside the borders
and domestically. Those industries that can’t send the work abroad,
however, must rely on importation of immigrants to drive down costs.
The drive for ever higher profits has led to a higher level of
exploitation of domestic worker, the increased use of exploited
workers globally.
All
immigrants should have the right to work anywhere to earn a living
and feed their families. Labour should have the right to cross
borders in a similar manner that workers can freely travel across the
European Union. Once workers are able to migrate freely it is up to
unions to organise them, as they seek to organise all unorganised
workers. The realities of exploitation creates the openings for
organising and press for demands that are beneficial to all workers
whatever their status. We support
the basic democratic right of any individual to emigrate to any
country in the world. Yet we do not countenance the incursionist
policies of Israeli West Bank settlements (unless the Palestinian exiles are given the same facility to relocate within Israel) or Han Chinese
expansionism into Tibet or Xinjiang. World socialist revolution, not
mass migration, is the socialist solution to the misery and
destitution of the majority of mankind under capitalism. What is
needed is the emergence of independent organisations to represent the
interests of the working class.
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