The Rights of Illegal Immigrants

3197 Words7 Pages

As the number of illegal immigrants entering the United States begins to increase once more, the issue of allowing or prohibiting immigrants to gain temporary status in order to obtain work continues to create national problems. According to a report given by the Department of Homeland Security, it is estimated that the number of immigrants entering the U.S. is at about 1.1 million people per year. (Hanson Par. 1) These individuals come into the United States in search of better living conditions and opportunities. However, these immigrants face challenges when it comes to work and other types of living.
The current federal government has not established a secure and assuring law in favor or against illegal immigrants working in the United States, with a legal status. This led state governments to attempt to regulate their own standards on the issue. The views and ideas surrounding the issue vary widely, whether in favor or against the issue. Legal citizens in America have provided varied opinions for illegal immigration as a positive or negative idea.
When dealing with the idea of the rights of illegal immigrants, the court case Yick Wo V. Hopkins (1886) comes into play. In this case surrounding the discussion of the rights of Chinese immigrants, the court ruled that the individual had Constitutional rights just as any other person in the nation. Within the 14th Amendment, it states, "Nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws," applied to all persons "without regard to any differences of race, of color, or of nationality," and to "an alien, who has entered the country, and has become subject in ...

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...lations, helping to secure the population of America from illegal immigrant. This will bring control away from the states, and utilize it as a federal law. Certain states such as California, will be opposed to the ideas presented within the act, but will have to respect and follow it. Police officers in every city and county of the U.S. will need to be trained in order to handle to the possibility of coming in contact with a illegal individual. Schools will then need to check the legal status of their students; leading many to self deport themselves and their families, controlling the security of the nation as a whole. The passing of the SB 1070 act is the most reliable and viable policy for the problem of illegal immigrant workers in the United States, and therefore should be considered for the nation as a valuable solution to the problems presented.

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