Texas Braceros
The Bracero Program in Texas, 1942-1964: Political, Social, Economic, and Racial Implications
Following the forced or "encouraged" migration of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Mexicans from the southwest United States, from Texas to California, during the rampant unemployment of the 1930s' Great Depression, a sudden labor shortage was experienced in the agricultural industry during World War II. In 1942, the Bracero Program received its start, granting select and growing number of Mexican immigrants special permission to work in certain capacities in the United States for a limited period of time. Texas did not take part in the Bracero Program for the first five years, but both the state's refusal to sign onto the program at first and its eventual entrance into the program and acceptance of Braceros in a major way had political, economic, social, and racial ramifications for the state that continue to resound and play oute nearly half a century after the program's end.
Political Forces
The Bracero Program was highly controversial from a political standpoint, especially in Texas, due to strained relationships with Mexico following a series of wars in the nineteenth century that resulted in a massive loss of land from Mexico to the United States. This was the reason so many ethnic Mexicans had been living in what became the United States at the outset, making the admittance of Mexicans into land that had formerly been theirs a highly politically charged proposition for both Mexico and the United States.
In addition, the people of Texas felt that the legislation that allowed for the Bracero Program was too restrictive; proud and fiercely defensive of their independence -- which had been won relatively recently from Mexico and which had been given up to join the United States even more recently -- Texans opted to continue their "open border" program that allowed for unregulated illegal immigration (Koestler 2010). According to some accounts, conditions of migrant workers in Texas actually worsened after Texas' entrance into the Bracero Program, leading to high tensions between the workers and the farmers over wages, living conditions, and other issues that had supposedly been established by the laws of the program (Koestler 2010). Eventually, illegal workers largely replaced the contracted Bracero workers because they posed less of a political and practical threat to the farmers (Campesino 2009). Texas and many other states still must deal with the political ramifications of their growing Mexican-American populations.
Social Impact
The Bracero Program led to a huge influx of Mexicans to the United States, both directly through legal means and indirectly by changing the labor market and perception of opportunity, causing larger and continuous waves of illegal immigration (Koestler 2010). The changing population of Texas during the time of the Bracero Program and in the years following has necessarily led to social impacts on Texan culture, and the changes that Texas society has undergone have not always been simple nor especially amicable.
Braceros and their families were often treated as second-class citizens or worse, with the agreements they signed often not lived up to by the farmers and other employers, and with permission to leave and return to their homes in Mexico dependent on emergency situations and a boss's willingness to sign off on the request (Campesino 2009). Illegal immigrants fared little better, and an entire class of Mexican immigrant workers and their families emerged in many states, including a sizable population in Texas (Renteria 2003). This created a social schism, where the dominant population of "native" Texans came to largely resent and/or ignore the sub-class of Mexican immigrants, their families, and their descendants; many activist groups are still working in Texas to get both the recognition and even the pay that many workers were promised and never received (Renteria 2003). Socially speaking, the Bracero Program created more divisiveness and tension in Texas than it accomplished a real multicultural cooperation.
Economic Issues
The original impetus for the implementation of the Bracero Program -- and one of the primary reasons behind Texas' initial decision to remain out of the program -- was the economic need for employment to continue to drive the agricultural business. United States citizens had been available for these jobs during the immense unemployment that existed during the 1930s, forcing the Mexicans out. World War II saw these workers enlisting in the military, working in factories, or moving into other jobs as the economy generally expanded.
The Mexican immigrants not only provided the plentiful labor that was needed, but they provided it cheaply -- typical wages were between fifty or sixty cents an hour, or around ten dollars per acre (Renteria 2003). Demand for agricultural products specifically and throughout the economy in general continued to expand during World War II and in the decades following, but prices were kept fairly stable during the war and even when they began to increase evenly due to economic expansion, worker's wages did not really rise (Renteria 2003). This meant that farmers were making an increased profit utilizing the under-paid and under-appreciated Mexican immigrant workers, but the economic benefit of this situation was not especially profound or long-lasting, as evidenced by many of the same current labor and wage issues that exist in the agricultural industry today.
Racial Tensions
One of the reasons that the Bracero Program was implemented was due to the already widespread hiring of illegal immigrants in the agricultural industry. This legalization of an already-existing practice was meant to help regulate the number and location of immigrants in the country, and in many ways contributed to the racial discrimination that already played a major part in the relationship between many farmers and the immigrant workers they hired (Zatz 1993). Not only were their linguistic, cultural, and physical differences between the white farmers and the Mexican immigrants they hired, but their legally separate status further reinforced and institutionalized the racism in the situation.
You’re 79% through this paper. Sign up to read the full paper.
Sign Up Now — Instant Access Already a member? Log inAlways verify citation format against your institution’s current style guide requirements.