Hotel America Needs to End

Hotel America Needs to End
The Stewart Hotel in midtown Manhattan on Oct. 7, 2022. The hotel is being used as an intake and assessment center for recently arrived illegal immigrants. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Betsy McCaughey
1/18/2023
Updated:
1/23/2023
0:00
Commentary

My sister-in-law, a nurse on Cape Cod, wants to visit New York and is struggling to find an affordable hotel.

If she were a Venezuelan illegal immigrant who had just arrived in the Big Apple on a bus from the southern border, she’d have a shot at a room at the four-star Row hotel, just steps from Times Square. Or a room at a SpringHill Suites by Marriott, a Holiday Inn Express, or a Comfort Inn. Free of charge.

Welcome to Hotel America! Newly arrived illegal immigrants are also getting three meals a day courtesy of room service, snacks at any time, and at some of the hotels, computer facilities and playrooms for the kids. All courtesy of local taxpayers.

New York, already a sanctuary city, is turning itself into a migration magnet by offering these over-the-top freebies.

Maine is another migration magnet. It’s the poorest state in the Northeast and one of the poorest in the nation. Even so, it’s the destination of choice for Haitian and African illegal immigrants. Maine rolls out the red carpet.

Some 400 illegal immigrant families are living in hotels and motels in Maine. To foot the bill, Maine’s housing authority dipped into Emergency Rental Assistance funds provided by Congress to help people who couldn’t pay their rent during the COVID-19 lockdowns.

Some states reserved the funds for residents facing homelessness, but Maine allowed the money to house newcomers. Now that federal money has dried up, the state is asking taxpayers to fork over $182 million for the illegal immigrants’ hotel and motel rooms.

All the while, Maine is facing the highest rate of homelessness in 15 years, with shelters near capacity and homeless locals desperate to survive winter in tents.

What’s to blame for this Americans-last policy? The “immigration industrial complex”—a web of politicians, immigration attorneys, and nonprofits who operate on government grants to care for illegal immigrants.

Driven by ideology and the lure of public money, the “immigration industrial complex” pushes relentlessly for money for illegal immigrants. It gets too little pushback from veterans groups and other Americans who need help themselves, and from taxpayers forced to provide things for illegal immigrants that they can’t afford themselves—such as hotel stays.

New York Mayor Eric Adams, who visited El Paso, Texas, over the weekend, complained on Jan. 22 that illegal immigrants have a “false impression” that they’ll be living in hotels.

Sorry, Mr. Mayor, it’s not a false impression. You can thank yourself for the illegal immigrants’ expectations. You inked a contract with the Hotel Association of New York City on Jan. 20, reserving 55 entire hotels exclusively for illegal immigrants. News like that spreads like wildfire, all the way to Latin America.

The wave of illegal immigrants arriving in New York is being called an “emergency” but will likely become the new normal, considering the amenities the city offers.

Illegal immigrants arriving at Port Authority are connected to many services, including immigration attorneys paid for by city and state taxpayers, and health care, not just emergency care.

As if that’s not enough, on Dec. 14, 2022, Adams announced Promise NYC, a new child care program expressly targeting children who entered the country illegally.

The “immigration industrial complex” is pushing for more, all across the nation. Washington state just opened up its Obamacare health insurance program to the undocumented—another magnet sure to attract illegal immigrants. The Affordable Care Act expressly bars undocumented enrollees, but the Biden administration—the “immigration industrial complex’s” best friend—granted the state a waiver to include people who are here illegally.

A century ago, immigrants from Europe came to America to make new lives. In New York, they moved into Lower East Side tenements—several families to a flat—took care of themselves, and contributed to New York’s future.

In the 1960s, Dominicans moved to New York in a wave and settled in Washington Heights, where apartments were cheap. They, too, became a major force in the city.

Immigration is still a part of this city’s and this nation’s future. But housing illegal immigrants in luxury hotels and providing services Americans can’t afford for themselves is the wrong idea. It will cause resentment.

Hotel America must be replaced with commonsense, bare-bones accommodations—a roof over their heads. Anything more will lure illegal immigrants with crazy expectations and make the crisis worse.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Betsy McCaughey, Ph.D., is a political commentator, constitutional expert, syndicated columnist, and author of several books, including “The Obama Health Law: What It Says and How to Overturn It” and “The Next Pandemic.” She is also a former lieutenant governor of New York.
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