Immigrants Not "Stealing" Americans' Jobs -- But Don't Relax Yet

POSTED ON BEHALF OF AMY TRAUB, ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF RESEARCH AT THE DRUM MAJOR INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY

A new study by the highly-regarded Pew Hispanic Center unearths yet more evidence that immigrant workers do not take jobs from Americans. Analyzing employment patterns in all 50 states and the District of Columbia from 1990 to 2000 and 2000 to 2004, the study finds no consistent association between the growth of the immigrant population and the employment prospects of native workers, even those with a similar age and educational profile to the arriving immigrants.

So should we all just sit back and stop worrying about immigration policy? Is the status quo, in which millions of undocumented workers live without authorization (or rights) in the United States and labor in substandard jobs, actually a beneficial, or at least benign situation for U.S. citizens?

Not quite.

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Keep our "Google this, Congress" Campaign Alive

In Congress at the Midterm: Their 2005 Middle-Class Record, DMI gave each member of Congress a grade based on how they voted on legislation of importance to current and aspiring middle-class Americans.

On June 20, we launched a one month Google AdWord campaign so that any person using Google to find information on their Member of Congress would instantly see an advertisement showing that member's grade on our
middle class report and a link to their full report card.

We need your help to keep our Google campaign running.

Please help DMI raise $16,693.15 and keep our Middle-Class Google Ads through November 7!!

You're a blog reader. You know the DMI Congressional Middle Class Scorecard. Maybe you are one of the many, many blogs that has used the scorecard as a resource. Now you can help us keep the google adwords campaign alive so it can continue to give countless web surfers vital information about their elected representatives. Look- it only takes 300 people to donate $50 today to make the goal.  But we are happy with $10, $20, $5,000, whatever you like!!  

Since June 20, 6,802,566 people have seen our ads and learned more about their members of Congress, the important legislation debated in DC in 2005, and today's obstacles to achieving the American Dream.

Donate Today:

To keep the campaign active, we need to raise $16,693.15. Please click here to donate today.

Blog It Today:
If you are a blogger please help us by cross posting this on your blog so we can spread the word.

If 300 people donate $50 today, we can make it, and let Congress know that millions of Americans are watching.

We'll be tracking our fundraising progress here the DMIblog because we view this as a netroots campaign at its heart. This is a chance to show the power of the netroots in forcing more government transparency so help us spread the word and if you can donate, please do.

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The Drum Major Institute Report (or "Why I Can't Trust Republicans Anymore") !8)

[update] All apologies. The party described below was "Laughing Liberally's Please, God, Just Let Me Get Some Sleep." Credit belongs to all those with Laughing Liberally for all their hard work in putting together one MFer of a throwdown. I regret the error.

Hey guys.  I'm new here.  I post a lot over at DailyKos, but for some reaason I've never registered on MyDD.  Today that streak ends.  

For the record, I'm that 'Former Dittohead' guy.  I spoke at YearlyKos, and had the good fortune of meeting Elana Levin, the Communications Manager for the Drum Major Institute for Public Policy over at Justin Krebs' big "Please, God, Just Let Me Get Some Sleep" closing night YearlyKos room party.  We had a great conversation (as far as I can remember), and after exchanging emails Elana forwarded me a link to the institute's recently released "Congress at the Midterm: Their 2005 Middle-Class Record."

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Scorecard says Congress fails the middle class...again

Cross posted from the DMIblog by Andrea .
So much talk about the politics, and who is campaigning with President Bush, and what Karl Rove is or is not freed up to focus on, and where the contributions are flowing.

It's easy to forget that the Congressional midterm elections are not just a referendum on the political parties or a bellweather for the '08 presidential campaign. They are actually about something a bit more substantive, namely whether Congress actually fulfilled its mission of voting in the interest of the people who put them into office.

Today, DMI releases our third annual scorecard of Congress, "Congress at the Midterm: Their 2005 Middle-Class Record," and the results are not positive. In fact, the results are pathetic. In vote after vote, Congress disdained the concerns of middle-class Americans and opted instead to favor the already wealthy and powerful: a surefire recipe for a shrinking middle class.

We release this scorecard each year because there are too few tools to engage the broad swath of Americans who want to work their way into the middle class or just try to hold onto their spot in a discussion about policy. When people actually do focus on policy, they often do it in these limited silos -- today is "tax day" or tomorrow is about "choice" and Friday we'll do "higher education" and then we'll talk about the "middle class" but we won't actually connect it to policy, to the actual votes that our legislators make that determine whether this thing called the middle class can exist.

The public is dissatisfied with Congress. They have a gut feeling that no one in DC is representing their interests. Well, as the scorecard showed, they are right. Congress championed the wish lists of oil companies, the insurance industry, and credit card issuers over the concerns of middle-class consumers and small businesses, while making it harder for ordinary citizens to hold corporate wrong-doers accountable.

Will we make friends out of this report? No. The party in power deserves most of the blame, but too many Democrats were right behind them on critical issues like the bankruptcy bill, preserving our civil justice system, and the Energy Bill, Inc.  But we're not in it to make friends, as evidenced by our decision to launch a 30-day Google Ad Word campaign today. Whenever anyone googles a member of Congress, an ad will pop up revealing that representative's score on our scorecard, with a link to our report.  (Try it, but hold yourself back - we pay by the click).

The only way Congress will ever make better policy is if they know their constituents are watching.
*               *                    *
Read what other blogs are saying on the scorecard
Sirota Blog
Ben Smith on NY Daily News

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