In 2007, Eliot
Spitzer, Governor of New York proposed that all illegal immigrants in his state
should be allowed to obtain drivers licenses. At the time, it was estimated
that between 500,000 and 1,000,000 illegal immigrants were residing in New York
state, most of them driving on the roads despite a lack of a driver’s license.
Spitzer proposed that instead of needing an American Social Security number to
get a driver’s license, New York would also accept a foreign passport as
adequate identification to obtain a license.
The move for giving illegal immigrants licenses is an issue that has arisen
and re-arisen multiple times, especially in states with high illegal immigrant
populations such as California. However, American citizens are seemingly
overwhelmingly against this policy with over 70% of New Yorkers polling against
this policy. This creates a debate over what the impact of these licenses will
be and how the public’s perception of this policy weighs up against these
potential benefits. Currently, seven states in the US allow illegal immigrants
to get drivers licenses: Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and
Washington.
Pros
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Cons
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The provision of driver’s licenses makes the streets
safer. Offering drivers licenses to illegal immigrants makes
the streets safer by giving drivers training to people who would otherwise be
driving on the streets without adequate education. Unlicensed drivers are
five times more likely to get into a fatal crash than licensed drivers.
A fact that needs to be acknowledged is that illegal
immigrants have a necessity to drive and the vast majority will do so
regardless of if they are given licenses or not. This is very dangerous both
for them and for those who they share the road with as they are operating
motor vehicles with a proper education on the rules of the road or any form
of driving instruction or test to ensure that they can competently and safely
drive on the streets.
Illegal immigrants are very likely to opt into this
system of driver’s education and licensing because it is in their own
interest to avoid breaking the law to avoid detection, but also because it is
very much in their interest to get instruction on how to drive as they are as
much a danger to themselves as they are to the rest of society when they
drive without instruction.
Therefore, offering illegal immigrants driver’s
licenses will help make the streets safer by giving drivers access to the
education and instruction they need to be safe and competent drivers.
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It is very unlikely that illegal immigrants will even
opt into this scheme. Illegal immigrants are notoriously paranoid about going
to the state for any form of assistance as they are afraid of deportation.
The vast majority of them would rather risk getting caught driving without a
license then they would risk going to the state as an illegal to receive a
license in the first place.
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This allows illegal immigrants to get drivers
insurance, which makes safer and fairer roads. Insurance is a key component in making the streets safe for all drivers
on the road. Allowing illegal immigrants to get driver’s licenses allows them
to gain driver’s insurance.
Driving absent insurance means that there is an
incentive to drive off if you cause an accident to avoid having to pay for
the damages you have caused and being criminally punished for driving without
insurance. This leaves the other driver having to foot their own bill for the
repairs to their vehicles. Moreover,
even if the uninsured driver stays at the scene, illegal immigrants are
characteristically very poor as they must engage in exploitative work to make
a wage because they must hide from the state and do not get the same
protections from the state, so would still be unable to pay for the damages
they have caused. Moreover, having uninsured drivers on the road increases
insurance premiums for all insured drivers on the road, as they have to de-facto
pay for the risk and damage these uninsured drivers cause.
Therefore, offering illegal immigrants driver’s
licenses allows for more fair and accountable systems of insurance and
driving conditions on the road.
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This is a marginal impact at best. The vast majority of
illegal immigrants will try to flee the scene of a crash because they would
be worried that the police might be called in to investigate the crash and
find out they are illegal and therefore deport them. Although this isn’t
always a realistic expectation, it is an expectation that most people in the
illegal immigrant community have because of their paranoia over the state
pursuing them and wanting to deport them. This fear is only exacerbated by
the anti-illegal immigrant rhetoric that permeates American society at
present and makes them feel that the state will try to seek them out however
they can to get rid of them.
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This is a gateway privilege that allows these people to
integrate into American society. Drivers licenses are used a major form of identification in America and
so granting illegal immigrants these forms of identification can help
enfranchise one of the most exploited minorities in America.
Despite American feelings on illegal immigrants, they
are there in their society, contribute to their communities and are a group
of people that are routinely and unjustly exploited because of their lack of
access to state protection. Despite popular opinion of this being a
punishment for breaking their laws, these people operate like any other
citizen in American society and are human beings who deserve to be treated as
such and to be offered at least some level of protection for the fact that
they are human and for what they contribute to America communities and
society.
Providing these people with a proper form of
identification, especially a driver’s license, which is almost universally
accepted as an adequate form of identification to access services from the
state and to interact with the rest of society. Specifically, this allows immigrant
communities to not feel as though they are confined to an isolated area as
they now can travel further distances to gain better employment without fear
of being caught and thrown into jail. Moreover, this allows them access to
all services offered by the state that require identification such as voter
registration.
Therefore, this helps enfranchise a group that is
normally exploited in America society.
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These people do not deserve to use the services of the
USA. They are not citizens, they are law-breakers and society has no
obligation to make life easier or more comfortable for those who break the
law. Regardless of their contributions to society or the economy, illegal
immigrants have broken the law. The consequences of their breaches of the law
should be remedied. If necessary, illegal immigrants should be punished in
proportion to the harm that their act has caused. Under no circumstances
should illegal acts allow these individuals to gain access to the status and
legal privileges that citizenship confers.
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There is a very big difference between rewarding people
for breaking the law and taking positive action to prevent them being
exploited and financially marginalised. The United States’ legal system
supposedly exists to protect everyone resident within its borders – not just
individuals possessing citizenship. Giving illegal immigrants basic access to
very rudimentary things such as the driver’s education does not reward
law-breaking or undermine the rule of law. Even if side opposition disagree with
granting illegal immigrants any rights, this argument is still defeated by
the beneficial consequences of ensuring that a much larger number of drivers
have received training on the rules of the road. Under the resolution,
America’s highways and cities will generally safer for both pedestrians and
other drivers.
On the point of deterrence, there are already very
large deterrents to trying to immigrate illegally. The trek is long,
dangerous and controlled by violent groups on either side of the border. Bandits
and people smugglers engage in robberies and people trafficking on the
Mexican side; extremist groups such as the minutemen attempt to assault or
shoot immigrants in transit from the American side. Not being able to get a
driver’s license once here is not in any way a deterrent that holds any
weight when put in context.
Being able to drive is a necessary skill in the US,
where under-investment in public transport infrastructure has led to workers
developing a dependence on private transport. The weak bargaining position of
an immigrant seeking work would be completely undermined if she were
unwilling to drive for or to her job. Even the most risk averse migrant
labourer accepts that the possibility of being caught driving without a
licence is a risk that they have no choice but to take.
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This rewards
law-breaking. This policy rewards those who
break the law and therefore is unjustified.
There are
immigration policies for a reason, and to skirt them because you do not want
to wait in line like everyone else does not entitle you to be treated on the
same level as those who adhere to American laws and immigration procedures.
Allowing illegal immigrants to get driver’s licenses simply because they made
it here is just rewarding them for being good at breaking our laws.
We have a moral
obligation to continue to deny illegal immigrants the perks of citizenship
because they have undermined the very laws and processes that citizenship
relies on in America. Moreover, if we simply treat them the same as legal
immigrants in our country, there is no deterrent left to stop people from
just ignoring our immigrant processes and trying to immigrate illegally to
avoid the queue.
Therefore, we shouldn’t give illegal immigrants drivers
licenses because that simply rewards law-breaking and undermines the legal
system and immigration policy we rely on.
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The state should never allow mob mentality to govern
its policies and specifically should never let prejudice of its people allow
the state to let exploitation and abuse of human beings go unaddressed. This
resentment and assumption that all Hispanics are illegal immigrants leeching
from the state is something that is already a perception that permeates US
thought. This policy will at worst marginally increase that sentiment, and
even if it does, the state has a duty to ignore blind hate and not let it
drive state policy.
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This will foster
further resentment of the Hispanic community in America. This policy will only further the resentment that
exists for illegal immigrants in America, and will make life harder for the
entire Hispanic community as a result.
It is no secret that
the idea of granting illegal immigrants driver’s licenses is a very unpopular
idea. In New York, for example, 70% of the electorate is against this policy.
Looking to California, not only are drivers licenses out of the question, but
in 1994 the state passed a bill denying illegals access to welfare,
healthcare and education by a 59% margin. Resentment for the community is
high and it is undeniable that this policy will be wildly unpopular with the
vast majority of Americans.
The issue with
Americans being unhappy with this policy is that they will channel their
unhappiness toward all immigrant communities and the Hispanic community more
generally. The concept of driver’s licenses especially fuels this hatred
because Americans believe that this will allow them to “masquerade” as normal
Americans and therefore will assume all Hispanics are these illegals that are
masquerading as legal immigrants in their communities. This will only
engender more hate and discrimination against these communities.
Therefore, this will seriously harm the
Hispanic-American community by fuelling hatred against them in the American
majority.
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The first problem with this argument is that it assumes
that illegal immigrants are easily identifiable without a driver’s license.
It is not like illegal immigrants walk around with a giant red sign that says
“Potential Security Threat” at present, and that when we give them licenses
they will finally get to put down their signs.
On this basis, the security risk presented by this
policy is minimal. Moreover, for what security risk might exist, it is very
easily mitigated or gotten rid of all together. For example, if
identification is needed for access to something that is vulnerable to
security threat, it is very easy for the government or relevant officials to
say that the only sufficient form of ID is a passport instead of a license,
due to the risk people may pose.
The additional harms identified by side opposition are
the result of service providers’ discriminatory practices. Federal and state
race equality laws prevent businesses and government employees from refusing
service to individuals based on their physical characteristics or ethnicity.
Therefore, official discrimination cannot exist. At best, this will simply be
soft discrimination.
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This allows illegals
to masquerade as normal immigrants. Allowing illegal immigrants to get drivers licenses is a security issue
for America.
Illegal immigrants
are a threat to the US because they have not gone through the necessary
background checks that all immigrants are supposed to go through before being
allowed into the US to ensure that they are not going to harm American
citizens.
Giving illegal immigrants
documents that- as proposition argument three says- could grant them access
to state services and to a wider range of private services is dangerous.
There is no way for frontline state and business staff to determine whether
drivers licence holders are migrants who have undergone appropriate police
screening, or criminals with a history of dishonest or exploitative
behaviour. The resolution may, therefore, allow disreputable individuals to
falsely claim to be normalised American citizens.
Alternatively, and
more likely, the resolution will undermine the value and utility of state
drivers licences – for Latin-American US citizens at the very least. As it
becomes known that immigrants from the south bearing licences might be more
likely to be dishonest, banks, stores and hospitals will become less willing
to accept drivers licences as conclusive proof of a Latin-American
individual’s identity.
If the degree to which service providers will trust a
driving licence is reduced, the improvements to illegal immigrants’ quality
of life that the resolution brings about will be short lived. Moreover,
legally resident Latin-Americans will find that their lives become much more
difficult. Service providers will adopt a stance of suspicion toward
Latin-American individuals, assuming that a Latino-American’s driving licence
offers no useful indication as to his immigration status and background.
Therefore, this policy constitutes a large security threat to America and its
citizens, and a significant danger to the integration and lifestyles of
thousands of Latino-American individuals.
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