That President Joe Biden has unveiled an immigration overhaul that features immediate paths to legalization for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals beneficiaries, Temporary Protected Status holders, and farmworkers is a fucking great thing. That major national media outlets are still quoting anti-immigrant hate groups on immigration reform as if they hold any legitimacy is a fucking terrible thing.
Media Matters’ Courtney Hagle reports that national outlets like the Associated Press, NBC, Bloomberg, and NPR all “irresponsibly” quoted or cited Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) and the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), two Tanton network organizations deemed anti-immigrant hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). One of those national outlets was far more irresponsible than the rest, Media Matters found.
Media Matters found that NPR quoted or cited the groups in three different instances during a two-day period last week, citing a CIS staffer on Jan. 20, citing FAIR on Jan. 21, and featuring CIS’ executive director Mark Krikorian on its Up First podcast that same day. “NPR’s John Burnett introduced CIS as a group that ‘favors less immigration to the U.S,’” Media Matters reported, in a matter-of-factness that probably thrills Krikorian, considering the racist and downright disturbing shit he’s said over the years.
“While capable of appearing as a sober-minded policy analyst in some settings, longtime CIS executive director Mark Krikorian’s contributions to the immigration policy debate rarely rise above petulant commentary dashed with extremist statements,” SPLC said. “Krikorian has called Mexican-American journalist Jorge Ramos a ‘white-Hispanic ethnic hustler,’” and once commented that the scrawling of the white supremacist terrorist who went to El Paso to kill Mexicans was “remarkably well-written for a 21-year-old loner.” Nice guest there, NPR.
SPLC also reported that a senior policy analyst for CIS, Stephen Steinlight, once said about former President Obama that he thought “being hung, drawn, and quartered is probably too good for him.” But sure, CIS is totally an immigration “think tank” that simply just “favors less immigration to the U.S.,” or something. By the way, that position is also out of favor, with Americans wanting more immigration to the U.S., not less.
That these hate organizations are being immediately cited by both local and national media as legitimate policy groups is alarming when advocates have already already been calling out this problem for years. Define American and the MIT Center for Civic Media said in a 2019 report that since 2014, CIS got mentions in The Washington Post, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times and USA Today, “and mentions increased in The New York Times, The Washington Post and USA Today.” The report said that “[o]ver 90% of the time that CIS was mentioned, it was without contextual information as to the nature of the group or its ties to the Trump administration.”
Media outlets are also quoting anti-immigrant hate groups as Americans are much more pro-immigrant than ever before, immigrant rights group America’s Voice (AV) notes.
In poll after poll, Americans favor a path to legalization or citizenship for undocumented immigrants versus mass deportation. I mean, do I need to remind everyone about the guy who just lost the presidential race and where he stood on all this? “A combined 80 percent support some sort of permanent solution—either citizenship or permanent status—for undocumented immigrants, with a strong majority of 64% supporting citizenship, 16% supporting permanent legal status short of citizenship, and 19% supporting deportation,” AV noted about one PRRI poll. Yet, it’s the hate groups that keep getting quotes?