Unspinning the Tall Tales About Immigrants and Health Care
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The health care town hall circus this August had a recurrent sideshow: the illegal immigration paper tiger. The well-scripted disruption tactics by antireform activists played up one patently false claim after another. One of the most prevalent was the ungrounded assertion that undocumented immigrants will receive health care benefits in the legislative proposals before Congress.
The coordinated efforts of status-quo activists culminated in one of the more embarrassing public outbursts in recent memory: an elected representative shouting at the president during his prime time address to Congress and the nation. It will be a long time before we forget Representative Joe Wilson (R-SC), in a rabid froth, interrupting the president’s speech to call him a liar.
Representative Wilson’s outburst and underlying charge—that the president’s plan will cover illegal immigrants—mimics the tactics and talking points of the status quo caucus. They have made clear that they will pursue any means—including false claims and ad hominem attacks—to derail both health care and immigration reform. Alleging that undocumented immigrants will get benefits is their go-to strategy to inflame a debate.
But this debate is too important to allow falsehoods to go unrebutted, so it’s time (yet again) to set the record straight:
Falsehood #1: Illegal immigrants will get taxpayer benefits under the health care reform proposals under consideration.
Fact: Every proposal on the table explicitly disqualifies illegal immigrants from receiving federal benefits. See the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee bill, Section 151 and the Energy-Commerce Committee bill, Section 246. All reports from the Senate Finance Committee deliberations indicate there will be similar restrictions contained in the bill they plan to unveil.
Falsehood #2: There won’t be any verification mechanisms to ensure illegal immigrants don’t receive benefits under these proposals.
Fact: Some verification process will be required under a new program to enforce the explicit prohibition on benefits to undocumented immigrants. The federal government already utilizes verification mechanisms like the Department of Homeland Security-administered SAVE Program. Opponents of reform cite the defeat of the verification amendments to health care legislation during House committee markups as proof that “illegals” will benefit from health care reform. In fact, by defeating the overly restrictive amendments committee members preserved critical administrative flexibility in defining the most effective verification process.
Falsehood #3: An ironclad citizenship verification mechanism will protect U.S. taxpayers and reduce costs by preventing illegal immigrants from receiving benefits.
See more stories tagged with: immigration, health care, wilson, reform
Marshall Fitz is Director of Immigration Policy at American Progress.
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