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Mexican-american immigration...?

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can someone give me the POLITICAL effects in MEXICO of the immigration from mexico to the united states? and would NAFTA be one of them?

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  1. Mexican Americans or American Mexicans qualify for Dual Citizenship.


  2. I'm not sure what you mean with about your first question. but NAFTA has nothing to do with immigration. It stand for The North American Free Trade Agreement and is used for exporting and importing goods, not people.

  3. MEXICO CITY - Opinion makers and migrant advocates in Mexico said Friday that the collapse of U.S. immigration reform plans hurts Mexican workers, U.S. employers and anti-terrorism efforts.

    President Bush's plan to legalize as many as 12 million unlawful immigrants from around the world while fortifying the border failed in the U.S. Senate on Thursday.

    "This is very bad news for Mexican migrants in the U.S.," said Jorge Bustamante, special rapporteur to the U.N. human rights commission for migrants. "It means the continuation and probably a worsening of the migrants' vulnerable conditions."

    The Rev. Luis Kendziersky, director of a shelter for migrants in the border city of Tijuana, said it appeared senators "are focused more on the political game than on the real needs of the people."

    "According to polls, the majority of the people (in the U.S.) want legality with concessions for undocumented migrants, but the radicals make a lot of noise," he said.

    Some major newspapers called the Senate's action hypocritical.

    "It's obvious that the politicians of that country want laborers, but they are not willing to legalize the labor that they need," El Universal said in an editorial.

    Migrants "will continue to be subjected to extraordinary means of discrimination," the daily paper said, adding that a "subculture of illegality" in border crossings also does nothing to aid the U.S. fight against terrorism.

    An editorial in the left-leaning La Jornada called the decision a "triple shipwreck" — a failure for the Bush administration, the United States and Mexican President Felipe Calderon.

    "The most powerful country on the planet will have to continue living, for many more months, with the scandalous contradiction between its laws and the real needs of its economy, thirsty for cheap labor to guarantee the international competitiveness of its exports, especially in agriculture."

    Calderon has been less vocal in demanding immigration reform than was his predecessor Vicente Fox, whose campaign for changes in U.S. policy failed.

    The president instead has focused strengthening Mexico's economy to stem the flow of workers north, while criticizing the 700-mile (1,130-kilometer) barrier Congress approved to increase security on the border with Mexico.

    On Thursday, Calderon called the Senate's decision a "grave error" and a failure to find a "sensible, rational, legal solution to the migration problem."

    Authorities on both sides of the border estimate that more than 11 million Mexicans live in the United States, as many of 6 million of them illegally.

    Not everyone in Mexico was disappointed by the death of the bill, which would have created a system to weed out illegal workers from U.S. jobs.

    Al Rojas, spokesman for the advocacy group Front of Mexicans Abroad, said the law "would have imposed prejudices, treating migrants like criminals and judging them."

    "Faced with a bad law, we preferred that they approved nothing," he said in a telephone interview.

    Roberto Heatley, a 61-year-old engineering consultant from Mexico City, said it was "a shame that they don't pay due attention to this problem in the United States."

    "Delaying it until 2009 does not solve the problem."

    ___

    Associated Press writers Istra Pacheco and Paul Kiernan contributed to this report.

  4. If you are referring to how Mexico is affected politically by immigration to the United States, I would say the biggest way Mexico is affected is by the money sent from the United States into Mexico by the Mexican nationals or US citizens with family in Mexico.  This puts a lot of money into the Mexican economy, which ultimately affects politics since politics essentially is the determining of how a collective group should best use the resources it has (such as money).

    Also, by having so many Mexican nationals living here, they are influenced by the American way of life when they return, or they share what they know about America with family members in Mexico.  This generates ideas for those living in Mexico.  Of course corruption gets into the way of many good ideas, but that will change eventually.

    NAFTA deals directly with trade.  This is an economic issue and therefore affects politics in the sense that it generates money through taxes for the government in addition to revenue for businesses doing the trading.

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