Five Tips for Talking Immigration Issues

by Julie Fisher-Rowe, The Opportunity Agenda

With immigration policy at the center of the national debate, we have an opportunity to fulfill our national promise of welcoming and inclusion. But it is not a foregone conclusion

Questions linger about what policy change will look like: what role enforcement will play, if it will include a guest worker program and so on. And now ICE has announced the release of hundreds of detainees, stirring controversy but also shedding light on who is being held for how long and for how much. If we want the policy discussion to yield real solutions that uphold our values and move us forward, we have to shape it ourselves.

If we want the policy discussion to yield real solutions that uphold our values and move us forward, we have to shape it ourselves.

Here are our five solutions for communicating about immigration:

Lead with values. “This debate is about the kind of country we want to be, how we treat people who are here, what it really means to be American.” These conversations are not centered on policy, they’re centered on our core beliefs and our value system. Persuadable audiences can hear arguments for policy reform much more clearly when we link it to these all-important values.

Talk common sense. Our current immigration laws are flawed and outdated and won’t serve us into the future. To fix them, we need a commonsense approach that takes into account our values, our economic needs, and our future. Point out that vitriol, political division, and a desire to exclude people don’t have a place in this debate.

It’s about all of us. “We all need a roadmap to citizenship for aspiring citizens.” This is an important sentence because it emphasizes that we all need this – our flawed immigration policies aren’t really working for any of us outside of a few bad-actor employers. This isn’t just about immigrants’ rights, or workers, or Latinos. Fixing these laws is the right thing to do for everyone.

Tell an affirmative story. There are a lot of misguided communications, skewed arguments and outright lies about immigration in the current discourse. But research shows that too much of a focus on correcting wrong information can just reinforce it in audiences’ minds. So resist the temptation to bust all the myths out there, and just tell people what is true.

Emphasize contribution and participation. This is what most New Americans want. The debate isn’t about what our government or citizens or legal residents are giving to, allowing or requiring of another group. It’s not that transactional. With immigration policy at the center of the national debate, we have an opportunity to fulfill our national promise of welcoming and inclusion. But it is not a foregone conclusion.

Questions linger about what policy change will look like: what role enforcement will play, if it will include a guest worker program and so on. And now ICE has announced the release of hundreds of detainees, stirring controversy but also shedding light on who is being held for how long and for how much. If we want the policy discussion to yield real solutions that uphold our values and move us forward, we have to shape it ourselves.

Now is the moment to get your voice out there! Write an op-ed, organize a march, or call your Congressperson. And when you do, use messages that will drive policy that upholds our values.

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