Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T11:32:37.028Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Labor Secretary Frances Perkins Reorganizes Her Department’s Immigration Enforcement Functions, 1933–1940: “Going against the Grain”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 December 2022

NEIL V. HERNANDEZ*
Affiliation:
Baruch College, City University of New York Marxe School of Public and International Affairs
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Labor Secretary Frances Perkins championed liberal immigration policies between 1933 and 1940. Some efforts were successful, but most were not due to political, economic, and social constraints on immigration policy making, especially in Congress. Yet, she reorganized the enforcement functions of her department when she created the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Narratives abound about the period, though few delve into this reorganization. In this article, I share an analytical framework that I developed, “policy innovation through bureaucratic reorganization,” to explain how Perkins temporarily eased the debarments, as well as deportations, of newcomers by adjusting agency resources, including staffing, budget, and infrastructure. I describe how she responded to pressures from immigration restrictionists by tightening these functions. My narrative adds to the literature on immigration policy history, which has not fully appreciated the role of bureaucratic reorganization. This research bolsters the perspective in political control theory that bureaucratic structure merits as much attention as does legislation as a tool for control.

Type
Article
Copyright
© Donald Critchlow and Cambridge University Press, 2022

In 1939 Congress considered a resolution to impeach Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, who was the first woman to serve in a presidential cabinet and whose ideas—from unemployment insurance to Social Security—seeded many of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s (FDR) New Deal programs. The charges against her and two department officials were, in part, that they “fail[ed] … neglect[ed], and refus[ed] to enforce the immigration laws of the United States.”Footnote 1 The accusations were stunning because the Immigration Act of 1924 had made the immigration laws, to that point, the most restrictive in American history. Although the literature in immigration policy history recognizes the liberal policies she championed—some were realized, others were not—less is known about how Perkins reorganized her department’s immigration enforcement functions to ease the execution of those laws between 1933 and 1940.

This literature tends to equate policy change with legislation and has not elucidated the significance of Roosevelt and his labor secretary’s creation of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS or Service) in 1933 or her use of it until 1940. On one hand, Aristide Zolberg, who provides one of the leading narratives, contends that the immigration system was unalterable: it could not be used to alleviate the Jewish plight because of the strict immigration laws then in effect.Footnote 2 On the other hand, Daniel Tichenor does consider how bureaucracies implement policies but argues that these laws prevented Perkins from increasing the admissions of newcomers.Footnote 3 Yet, others recognize the secretary’s policy advocacy efforts to facilitate admissions, such as by easing the issuance of visas, by confronting the State Department.Footnote 4 Although recognizing the State Department’s influence over immigration policy, Barbara McDonald Stewart nonetheless credits Perkins with the admission of refugee children.Footnote 5 And, even though Bat-Ami Zucker notes that Perkins needed to reorganize her department’s immigration-related functions and Rachel Brenner Graham writes that the secretary had power over immigration with the Service, neither researcher explains the structural significance of the INS in this period.Footnote 6 This observation points to the need for students of history and political science to look at what some might consider the same thing in new ways to see what we could learn.

In fact, Mae Ngai and Thomas Monroe Pitkin acknowledge that Perkins made administrative changes that reduced deportations.Footnote 7 The immigration policy history literature shows that, in the past, bureaucrats took similar actions to relax border control to permit migrants to toil for American businesses.Footnote 8 Kitty Calavita demonstrates how resourceful immigration officials allowed migration by engaging in “informal lawmaking.”Footnote 9 At the same time, immigration bureaucrats were just as inventive in devising ways to expel newcomers, including by pushing for their “voluntary departure.”Footnote 10 Also, immigration officials limited the mobility of laborers from Mexico to thwart their obtaining better wages and working conditions.Footnote 11 S. Deborah Kang explains that Perkins encountered both compliance and resistance among staff regarding deportation policy.Footnote 12 A better understanding of her influence over INS’ immigration enforcement functions—the debarment of new arrivals and the deportation of the undocumented—will show the opportunities and limitations of Secretary Perkins’s systemic actions to ease immigration restriction.

I use political control theory to examine Secretary Perkins’s efforts of going against the grain of immigration restriction. The theory explains how the power of Congress and the president, as well as lobby groups, shape policy implementation in public agencies. This scholarship considers the legislature to be more influential over agencies than the president is. In their seminal work, Mathew McCubbins, Roger Noll, and Barry Weingast assert that lawmakers push bureaucracies to adhere to their favored policies primarily by mandating administrative procedures.Footnote 13 In this vein, David Epstein and Sharyn O’Halloran contend that legislators enact laws that are “detailed” or “vague,” depending on their desire to dictate or delegate the execution of laws, respectively.Footnote 14 Detailed legislation can prevent policy drift: bureaucrats deviating from the policy preferences of politicians and the coalitions they represent.Footnote 15 When Congress combines procedure and structure to influence the execution of laws in government agencies, B. Dan Wood and John Bohte contend that “bureaucracies … are more difficult to change.” Their attributes can include “tightly bound discretion, clear mandates, and structural autonomy [from politicians].”Footnote 16 These insights suggest that between 1933 and 1940 lawmakers could have expected the specificity of the strict immigration laws to be followed by the Labor Department.

Led by Terry Moe, political control theory has evolved to incorporate the use of various forms of structure at the president’s (and Congress’) disposal. He argues that the structuring of public agencies bears directly on control of the policy implementation process.Footnote 17 In this “politics of structural choice,” Moe considers, in addition to Congress and the president, the roles of interest groups and bureaucratic officials in institutional change. He contends that interest groups drive such change. With respect to structure, researchers assert that features such as political appointments, budget, agency leadership, decentralization, and professional training can affect political control.Footnote 18 More recently, Stuart Shapiro shows that a feature of agency structure, the independence of analysts within an agency, influences procedural rules that are directed at maintaining the policy preferences of political principals. Equally important, he reminds us that bureaucratic structure can affect an agency’s outputs.Footnote 19 As far as the president, Moe and Scott Wilson contend that the executive can exert considerable power over the administrative state through the use of structure, such as centralizing authority.Footnote 20 Nonetheless, William Howell and David Lewis demonstrate that presidential powers have limitations: presidents can create cabinet-level agencies to make sure policies are implemented according to their priorities when “Congress is relatively weak.”Footnote 21 Yet, Lewis also shows that legislators can hinder the president’s management efforts.Footnote 22 In sum, the theory helps to assess Perkins’s effect on debarments and deportations, but it needs coherence for application. The policy implementation process does not necessarily follow a straight line. Implementation can include twists and turns, like the contradictions in immigration policy making between rejecting and accepting newcomers.

Below I apply an analytical framework that I developed, “policy innovation through bureaucratic reorganization,” with the goals of contributing to political control theory and using this framework to reconsider accounts of Perkins’s leadership on immigration policy.Footnote 23 My framework—consists of two phases: creation and evolution.Footnote 24 The framework relies on the contention that officeholders can create complex bureaucracies to circumvent existing laws through policy implementation activities. They do so in part because the laws themselves may be difficult to change. Below I focus on the second phase, evolution, to describe the exact ways that elected officials can influence the execution of laws in government agencies. Evolution involves three steps. First, in a new bureau, officeholders engage in resource adjustment to relax the rigid implementation of laws. They add “liberal bureaucrats” who make administrative decisions to loosen operational rules. These officials or their agents reduce a bureau’s resources including its staffing, funding, and infrastructure. This step results in policy innovation: the agency’s administrative results (i.e., policy outputs) are liberalized.

Second, officeholders participate in coalition management . The structure of the bureau changes the benefit flows for competing interest groups. Officeholders and their agents use the liberalized results to cater to previously marginalized groups. To shift benefits to interests that oppose liberal immigration, officeholders can again use resource adjustment, expanding resources toward the implementation of existing (strict) laws, including through “restrictive bureaucrats.” Third, the president or Congress undertakes system redesign . The agency is reorganized because it produces disparate impacts; although some people benefit from its administrative results, the agency generates political, economic, and/or social aftereffects that harm others.Footnote 25

I proceed in the order of these three steps. I begin by explaining the ways Perkins redesigned her department’s immigration functions as a structural solution to the stringent immigration laws in operation given the political, economic, and social contexts. Commencing in 1933, the secretary undertook several strategic actions including centralizing her authority over these functions through the inception of the INS. I use agency data to demonstrate that her efforts contributed to policy outputs of more newcomers admitted to and fewer of them deported from the United States. Next, I describe how she responded to immigration advocacy groups that had been marginalized by immigration officials. She empowered the advocates as they proposed reforms. They also benefitted from these outputs. However, Perkins also responded to pressure from restrictionists. Between 1936 and 1938, INS functions were tightened following criticism by Congress and the State Department.Footnote 26 Also, as Maddalena Marinari makes clear, advocacy groups of Jews and Italians were not homogenous; they included pragmatists who accepted some immigration restriction to make gains on legislation centered on family unity.Footnote 27 Last, Congress considered the INS a risk to national security, so in 1940, at Roosevelt’s request, lawmakers moved it from the Labor Department to the Justice Department.

RECONFIGURATION OF LABOR’S IMMIGRATION FUNCTIONS

Between 1933 and 1940 the economic, social, and political contexts of the United States largely constrained any action to ease immigration. The Great Depression promoted the notion that newcomers competed with Americans for jobs.Footnote 28 The demand for work had decreased and the supply of unemployed workers increased. For its part, American society included strong anti-Semitic sentiments.Footnote 29 Politically, legislative changes were blocked in Congress by the southern wing of the Democratic Party.Footnote 30 To complicate the US immigration system further, the Immigration Act of 1924 made the State Department responsible for screening visa seekers abroad. The Act also limited the number of immigrants by establishing quotas.Footnote 31 The Labor Department continued to operate the part of the immigration system within the United States: it was responsible for screening and debarring new arrivals as well as deporting those who were undocumented. In 1933 its Bureau of Immigration admitted 23,068 newcomers; this number was the lowest since 1831, when 22,633 immigrants landed on American shores. The Bureau also deported 19,865 newcomers in 1933, at that point the most in history.Footnote 32 These data show that the bureaucracy Labor Secretary Perkins inherited that year was undeniably strict. Despite the barriers to immigration reform and the strictures of the Bureau, as secretary she had administrative power over the immigration functions under her purview.

In June 1933, FDR signed Executive Order 6144, with input from Perkins, which merged the bureaus of Immigration and Naturalization into the INS.Footnote 33 George Martin notes that earlier she had informed the president that the Immigration Bureau was in need of reform. She was unsure about how to proceed, though she could not be indecisive.Footnote 34 Her rationale for this structural innovation included a blunt assessment of the bureau as “disorderly; uncontrollable; unlawful [and] irregular.” She had deduced that these problems were due to a lack of administrative control. She found that too many departmental officials had their hands in immigration. Their numbers, along with the power they wielded, made them susceptible to influence by politicians, other public officers, and native-born Americans.Footnote 35 Additionally, the secretary determined that authority within the system was too diffuse: there “were all of these districts” where decisions were made in the field.Footnote 36 So, she reduced the districts by almost two-thirds, from 58 to 22.Footnote 37 Much like Moe asserts, by resorting to reorganization, she achieved centralized control of the immigration functions in her department.Footnote 38

Then the secretary homed in on personnel through addition and subtraction. She added a notable “liberal bureaucrat,” as she championed the president’s appointment of Daniel MacCormack as INS commissioner.Footnote 39 Among other experiences, he served as a captain in the US Army during World War I.Footnote 40 Perkins considered him to have “great administrative ability.” She was also impressed with his appreciation for the “dignity of each human being.”Footnote 41 This perspective aligned with her own views on immigration: “each one of these fellows who comes in as an immigrant, together with his wife and children, are human beings.”Footnote 42 Thus, the secretary and the commissioner were simpatico. MacCormack’s appointment served to advance their goals because, as Jennifer Nou asserts, agency heads “possess substantial discretion to impose internal structures and processes to further their interests.”Footnote 43 In their first year, he subtracted 571 staff from the Service. He conducted an agency-wide assessment of employees to decide who stayed. One of the first groups of employees to be let go was the department veterans, “men with 30 years of service,”Footnote 44 as arguably they were set in their ways and would resist implementing the secretary’s policies given their long tenures. As Moe notes, bureaucrats have career and institutional interests that might conflict with an agency’s mission.Footnote 45 The assessment process—which included the US Civil Service Commission to safeguard the “merit system”—also affected other groups: clerical and nontechnical employees, as well as technical staff such as immigration inspectors, patrol inspectors, and naturalization examiners. MacCormack made no bones about “sift[ing] out the deadwood” throughout the agency.Footnote 46

For the many employees who remained, the commissioner implemented a training program to mold their mind-sets. He sensitized the workforce to the struggles of immigrants by coaching them to “strive for that most difficult ideal—technical accuracy informed by justice and by humanity.”Footnote 47 This standard was a dramatic change in the modus operandi of the personnel’s exercise of exclusion and expulsion powers. With respect to the former, a 1931 study found that inspectors “stretched” the limits of the law. For example, the likely-to-become-a-public-charge clause was a catchall when “officers think the alien ought not … enter, but the facts do not come within any specific requirement of the statutes.”Footnote 48 But the training initiative instructed them to be more generous. Immigration inspectors at seaport and land border stations were required to be “courteous and dignified.” They were taught to be like a “welcoming committee.”Footnote 49 Should a newcomer be detained for more questioning, inspectors were schooled to apologize for taking such action.Footnote 50 Regarding the latter, a 1931 presidential commission had concluded immigrants were expelled even though “further development of the facts or proper construction of the law would have shown their right to remain.”Footnote 51 Yet the training regimen instructed staff to use “competent” interpreters because many newcomers did “not understand or speak the English language.” Given the adversarial nature of deportation cases, inspectors were forbidden from threatening or cajoling people to make incriminating statements.Footnote 52 As a precondition for exclusion or expulsion, MacCormack instructed his agents to develop the “facts both for and against the interests of the Government and of the alien concerned.”Footnote 53

Ngai observes that the training program was an effort to “raise the professional level of INS personnel”Footnote 54; however, this program furthered the liberal execution of policies and procedures. Marc Allen Eisner and Kenneth Meier show that organizational factors like professional training and expertise affect policy implementation even if they are not inventions of the president or Congress.Footnote 55 With respect to the Service, the training program was a structural device that affected the agency’s exclusion function: during the inspection process, staff had authority to debar new arrivals. Previously, immigration inspectors manipulated the public charge clause to exclude newcomers when they were otherwise eligible. During the period in focus, the immigration laws were a constant, as was Regulation 3(J)(1), which provided “no hard and fast rule … as to the amount of money an alien should have.”Footnote 56 Still, the training curriculum is instructive, as it was a critical change in how inspectors applied this clause. In the module on this process, there was a mechanism that permitted the “temporary detention” of a newcomer who was eligible for admission but for “possession of inadequate funds to reach the inland destination.”Footnote 57 Immigrants were allowed to raise the funds they needed, albeit in detention, to gain admission. The connection between training and admissions is further supported by INS data: from 1934 to 1940 those denied entry based on this clause decreased by 18 percent, from 1,584 to 1,296.Footnote 58 Also, the number of foreign nationals who entered carrying less than US$50 increased by 157 percent, from 6,678 to 17,137.Footnote 59

Secretary Perkins used her centralized control over INS’ immigration and naturalization functions to facilitate admissions by having these functions complement each other. Like Moe and Wilson argue, a “centralization strategy” helps the president and, by extension, his political appointees to enforce managerial rules to influence bureaucratic behavior.Footnote 60 Between 1933 and 1940, the Service processed naturalization applications that doubled the number of Americans, from 113,363 to 235,260. This increase was influenced by the secretary and the commissioner as they ordered naturalization examiners to cease opposing applicants for insignificant errors.Footnote 61 These new citizens, and those who had become part of the body politic before 1933, were poised to file applications for Rule 25(A) permits—authorized by Section 9 of the Immigration Act of 1924—so their family members could emigrate from the Third Reich. These permits were granted by the INS, not the State Department, and authorized consular officials to issue “nonquota” or “preference” visas to the kin of Americans.Footnote 62 The Service’s approvals of permits grew from 10,254 in 1933 to a yearly average of 15,046 between 1934 and 1940.Footnote 63 This trend is corroborated by archival records, namely from the Honolulu district office, which experienced a doubling of Rule 25(A) requests. That office noted they were filed “mostly from persons of Jewish extraction desirous of assisting relatives to leave certain European countries.”Footnote 64 Such efforts contributed to the inflow from the Reich as German-Jewish arrivals increased from 1,786 to 19,880 between 1934 and 1940.Footnote 65 Surely these numbers were buoyed in 1937 by FDR’s decision to relax quota restrictions.Footnote 66

In addition, the Service eased the entries of discrete numbers of migrant workers at the Southern and Northern borders by its administration of Rule 3(Q). It permitted the INS to issue identification cards to foreign nationals, from Mexico and Canada, who frequently crossed the borders for business or pleasure.Footnote 67 The cards had allowed entry for employment until 1925.Footnote 68 This prohibition continued in 1934, so only immigrants who permanently resided stateside could hold jobs.Footnote 69 However, from 1935 to 1940 an annual average of 3,312 Mexican and Canadian laborers crossed the borders “daily or at least four times a week … with or without border crossing cards.”Footnote 70 This development seems attributable to the secretary and staff. For her part, she opined that Americans preferred not to engage in manual laborFootnote 71 and that, historically, immigration provided laborers to America.Footnote 72 Her perspective aligned with another of her duties as labor secretary: the Employment Service “recruit[ed], distribut[ed], and direct[ed] seasonal farm workers.” It assessed the needs of farmers and moved laborers based on demand,Footnote 73 which increased as the economy improved. In 1935 the Treasury Department determined that farm income grew; there were “gains of more than seasonal proportions in all regions.”Footnote 74 As far as immigration staff, Patrick Ettinger points out that in the mid-1920s officials had agreed with growers to legalize their workers and that by 1930 officials had devised a mechanism to control Mexican migration to respond to growers.Footnote 75 Contrary to criticisms of political control theory—as overemphasizing external control of bureaucracies while underappreciating internal control of themFootnote 76—the extraofficial entries of migrants from 1935 to 1940 suggest there were shared interests and control between political appointees and staff.

Moreover, Perkins and MacCormack reformed the deportation process. They made an important change by prohibiting staff to make warrantless arrests of newcomers. The presidential commission had recommended that “an independent board” should issue arrest warrants.Footnote 77 Staff could not be trusted with the responsibility to make arrest decisions. S. Deborah Kang notes the commissioner considered warrantless arrests unconstitutional; a warrant was a procedural safeguard for people.Footnote 78 The secretary, too, abhorred such arrests and the subsequent detention of them for questioning.Footnote 79 Warrantless arrests were “ordered discontinued” because warrants by law could only be issued with her approval; staff could telegraphically request them to expedite an arrest.Footnote 80 These administrative actions were—as Jeffrey Pressman and Aaron Wildavsky demonstrate in their important study on policy implementation—“decision point[s]” that required “clearance” and produced “delays.”Footnote 81 In 1934 the commissioner reported that this prohibition meant “the disappearance of many suspects, particularly on the Mexican border.” He calculated that “2,600 persons … escaped who under the old system would have been held and deported.”Footnote 82 By 1940 the number of deportations was reduced from 19,865 to 6,954, or 65 percent, since 1933. Other agency activities apparently followed suit: repatriations decreased from 1,645 to 1,475, or 10 percent, and voluntary departures decreased from 10,347 to 8,594, or 17 percent.Footnote 83 But this activity was not reduced as much as were deportations. Adam Goodman shows that in 1927 immigration staff were instructed to rely on voluntary returns as a means to avoid spending for deportations; these returns were faster than expulsions that necessitated 10 steps.Footnote 84 The sizeable outputs for voluntary departures suggest that political control had its limits in the INS.

The secretary also curtailed deportations through budget maneuvers, much like B. Dan Wood and Richard Waterman assert about using agency funding as a method to affect administrative results.Footnote 85 She eliminated the Service’s deportation squad, thereby reducing the resources that were used to expel immigrants. On paper, the squad was known as “Section 24,” named after a provision in the immigration laws that banned contracting foreigners to work in the United States.Footnote 86 In practice, the unit far exceeded the law. Section 24 had been established in President Herbert Hoover’s administration, and its officers indiscriminately raided places where newcomers assembled.Footnote 87 Perkins was well aware that the unit targeted labor leaders, who were of “foreign extraction” and labeled as “alien agitators,” to “quell labor troubles.” She further knew that “immigrants were shaken down by … this squad.”Footnote 88 Equally troublesome, it arbitrarily sought mass expulsions. Places where foreigners congregated, such as lodging houses, were raided. In one case, 610 people were rounded up in Detroit. In another, “the entire Chinese section of Chicago” was stormed.Footnote 89 Her challenge was not whether but how to rid her department of Section 24. The officers were tenured: they held “civil service status” and could not be dismissed outright.Footnote 90 In response, Perkins let the unit’s funding—a $200,000 congressional appropriation—run out. Then she terminated its 53 officers because of insufficient funds.Footnote 91

More broadly, INS expenditures were reduced in 1934 and then incrementally increased each year until 1940 (Figure 1 immediately below). Expenditures were never higher than in 1933. Therefore, I use 1933 as a baseline for comparison with other years because it is the height of immigration restriction during this period: as previously noted, 1933 marked the historic low of admissions and a high mark for expulsions. Arguably, the agency needed to maintain spending at $10.4 million to achieve this level of restriction. As seen in Figure 1, in 1934 expenses totaled $8.5 million, a reduction of $1.9 million from the previous year. The US budget director had ordered the reduction.Footnote 92 Yet, the INS generated revenue through the collection of naturalization fees and head taxes, totaling $2.8 million in 1933.Footnote 93 Conceivably, this revenue could have been used to offset the reduction in budgetary allocations from other sources, and maintained funding for the operation of the Section 24 squad. Instead, MacCormack noted that the spending reduction forced him to eliminate the personnel that executed the agency’s debarment and deportation functions.Footnote 94 Indeed, Figure 1 shows that agency employment was reduced in 1934 from 4,105 to 3,524. According to one agency official, the workforce was “below the minimum required for the efficient conduct of business.”Footnote 95 After 1934, as Figure 1 illustrates, the workforce mostly increased throughout the period. Generally speaking, this trend matches the increase in the admissions of immigrants and visitors, shown in Figure 2 (directly below). Also, Figure 3 shows that net immigration increased in the later years. (This figure appears further below.) There was demand on the INS. Yet spending never matched the level of expenditures reached in 1933, suggesting that immigration restriction was not the same priority for Perkins and MacCormack as it had been for their predecessors.

Figure 1. Expenditures (left scale) and Employees. Footnote 96 (right scale)

Source: Department of Labor.

Figure 2. Admissions (left scale) and Debarments. Footnote 97 (right scale)

Source: Department of Justice.

Figure 3. Net Immigration. Footnote 112

Source: Department of Justice.

The management of the Service’s infrastructure—the buildings, offices, and facilities where bureaucrats performed their duties—also reflected a disposition to assist immigration. Broadly speaking, I consider infrastructure included in McCubbins et al.’s definition of bureaucratic structure, which is “the allocation of resources and decisional authority among agencies and within an agency.”Footnote 98 Thus, INS’ investment in its workspaces was a form of resource allocation. In them staff made critical decisions involving the inspection and detention of newcomers. This infrastructure supported 212 or so sites: 75 at seaports and 137 at ports of entry (in 1939).Footnote 99 Figure 1 demonstrates that spending on immigration stations mostly decreased during the period, from $283,259 to $26,706. In 1934 the Service made one significant investment, dedicating $1.2 of $1.4 million from a Public Works Administration allotment to make capital improvements on Ellis Island.Footnote 100 Pitkin notes that it had become, in effect, a detention center under Hoover, and Perkins wished to replace the island with another location.Footnote 101 Between 1937 and 1940, nonetheless, 611,910 immigrants and visitors from a total of 961,700 were inspected there.Footnote 102 Also, this investment responded to the Ellis Island Committee—an advisory board the secretary appointed—that recommended changes to the buildings and grounds. These enhancements were mainly programmatic, such as creating bigger rooms for social workers who advocated for newcomers at exclusion and expulsion hearings.Footnote 103 The use of these funds evidences a priority to facilitate arrivals, not to detain and deport them.

The same can be said of many of INS’ border facilities because the secretary shared control over them with the Treasury Department. It was the lead in planning for the construction of new border inspection stations during the 1920s. The government had sought to tighten its borders to collect revenue—the Immigration Act of 1917 continued the requirement for immigrants to pay head taxes. Also, the Quota laws compelled the government to scrutinize the entries of “determined” newcomers who had failed to obtain visas.Footnote 104 A 1928 report by the Treasury and Labor departments determined that the stations, to that point, were insufficient: inspections occurred in the open air, there was a lack of office space to thoroughly examine new arrivals, and locations were remote.Footnote 105 From 1933 to 1940, these posts were heavily trafficked, as short-stay guests walked to America for business or pleasure, numbering 25.7 million annually.Footnote 106 In 1934 the INS assessed its posts as operationally deficient. As far as debarment, border crossers were subject to “cursory inspection.” Many were not duly “manifested” or “statistically recorded.” In terms of deportation, they could not be thoroughly questioned because “it [was] a physical impossibility to detain” so many.Footnote 107 During this period, 22 border stations were erected, plus 15 had been built between 1930 and 1932.Footnote 108 But, they did not permit the INS to fully enforce its functions. The posts were shared between officers of the INS and the Treasury’s Customs Service, so spaces were limited even though their designs contemplated dual purposes. Also, only seven sites included areas for detention and the administration of hearings.Footnote 109 The limitations of these border stations and the Labor Department’s shared control over them contributed to porous borders.

Figures 2 and 4 (immediately below) support the contention that during the period in focus the secretary’s reorganization contributed to reductions in the numbers of debarments and deportations. In this narrative, the INS is front and center, which considers Kenneth Meier and Laurence O’Toole, Jr.’s critique of political control research as overestimating the relationship between the political environment, including politicians, and agency outputs because “the bureaucracy itself is often left behind.”Footnote 110 I trace Perkins’s actions, which employ bureaucratic structure, to these immigration enforcement functions. The connection between her use of structural tools, such as the appointment of MacCormack, and the debarment and deportation functions is supported by political control theory. For instance, Wood and Waterman demonstrate that a political appointment “is very important” and “agency outputs shifted immediately after a change in agency leadership.”Footnote 111 As to debarments in Figure 2, they decreased by 4 percent, from 5,527 to 5,300. Inspectors did not exclude new arrivals with the same frequency as in 1933. The door was more ajar at seaport and land border stations under her watch than during Hoover’s administration. With respect to deportations in Figure 4, as previously noted, they sharply declined in 1934. The INS curbed the brisk business of expelling immigrants. To be clear, these results in the context of the Holocaust are modest. Still, more newcomers were helped by the Service due to Perkins’s reorganization.

Figure 4. Deportations, Voluntary Departures, and Repatriations. Footnote 113

Source: Department of Labor.

Note: Figures in color in the online version only.

THE BALANCING ACT OF INTERESTS

These figures, using the first step of my analytical framework, elucidate the ebbs, but the flows between 1936 and 1938 are not apparent without appreciating the second step—the management of interest groups. For their part, Zolberg and Tichenor see lobby groups as more influential than government officials in the policy-making process. Their narratives consider these pressures as pivotal for the passage of laws that expand and restrict immigration.Footnote 114 More recently, Marinari adds nuance, as she points out that Jewish and Italian advocacy groups, even as immigration policy liberalizers, did not agree on strategy in their communities. She, too, focuses on their push in the legislative process.Footnote 115 In political control theory, these perspectives align with Wood and Waterman, as well as Moe. The former contend that interest groups attempt to influence policy through, among other means, publicity and lobbying activities. The latter asserts that they drive structural changes to affect policy implementation.Footnote 116 Alternatively, Jonathan Macey argues that the structural design of an agency—namely, its focus on a single interest group or multiple groups—can help to mitigate their influence.Footnote 117 In line with this argument, below I describe how the secretary responded to immigration advocates and restrictionists.

As immigration advocates pressed FDR and the State Department for more visas for refugees fleeing Nazi Germany, Perkins responded by giving them power to assess the Labor Department and recommend reforms. The focus on the State Department was logical because it controlled the first checkpoint to emigrate to America and, as noted earlier, Southern Democrats blocked reforms in Congress. Also, the State Department was change resistant, as David Wyman shows, because consular officers erected “paper walls” against Jews by rigidly administering the visa process.Footnote 118 This department had a slew of restrictionists in key posts, as Alan M. Kraut, Richard Breitman, and Thomas W. Imhoof point out, and anti-Semitism was prevalent.Footnote 119 Jewish advocacy groups sought to restructure this process to facilitate immigration, much like Moe contends interest groups do to realize policy preferences. These interests pressed FDR, with little to no success, both inside and outside his administration. On the inside, besides Perkins there were other prominent liberalizers seeking to reform the State Department, such as Henry Morgenthau, Jr. who lobbied it in 1933.Footnote 120 On the outside, notable groups like the American Jewish Committee and the American Jewish Congress made the case to FDR. Breitman and Alan Lichtman assert that he was a “bystander” and did not provide the Jews aid until 1936.Footnote 121 The strategy to engage the presidency was, in line with Marinari, advanced by Jewish leaders and not embraced by other community members who opposed incrementalism.Footnote 122 Yet, Perkins immediately helped. With the advent of the INS, she formed the Ellis Island Committee, which was charged with a review of Labor’s immigration functions. She touted the 51-members as “nonpartisan,” though they were very much pro-immigrant, as a network of 33 social service agencies advised them.Footnote 123 Advocates were, thus, poised to improve the second checkpoint of the US immigration system.

In response to these interests, the Service eased admissions and checked expulsions. In terms of the former, as previously discussed, Rule 25(A) passes allowed American families to, technically, bypass the State Department because their foreign relatives were exempt from the quotas or received preference visas.Footnote 124 This outlet was further facilitated by the INS granting naturalizations as well as Jews tending to become US citizens, as Marinari asserts.Footnote 125 Additionally, immigration officers debarred fewer arrivals based on the public charge rule; many more newcomers were admitted carrying less money. This development, which began in 1933, was exactly what liberalizers—inside and outside the Roosevelt administration—had lobbied so passionately for without success from the State Department until 1936. With respect to the latter, the elimination of the draconian Section 24 unit effectively offered newcomers some respite.Footnote 126 Those who came as tourists, for instance, and overstayed their visas were less vulnerable to deportation. An equivalent action—the extension of visitors’ visas—was authorized by FDR five years later after Kristallnacht. Footnote 127

Furthermore, the business lobby—agriculturalists and industrialists—was interested in unskilled and skilled laborers from Mexico and Canada, respectively.Footnote 128 The lobby relied on them for labor and for a competitive advantage in the agricultural and industrial sectors. The Quota laws seemingly reduced the supply of workers from Europe, and the exodus of Southern Blacks to industrial centers in the North and South likely resulted in them replacing the Europeans.Footnote 129 Nativists contended that these Black people were then succeeded by Mexicans in the agricultural sector.Footnote 130 For their part, Northern industrialists relied on Canadians for their high-skilled labor. One estimate noted that 15,000 people commuted daily from Ontario to Detroit,Footnote 131 long the hub for automobile production. This reliance was exacerbated as the Great Depression precipitated the movement of Americans looking for work. Despite an oversupply of native workers, this lobby seemingly sought to exploit foreigners, especially Mexicanos, for profit maximization. They were coveted in states like Michigan and Texas because they were paid substandard wages; in California and Colorado, businesses kept production costs down by using Mexicans, who did not seek to unionize.Footnote 132

The INS responded to these interests. The decision to prohibit warrantless arrests, as described above, meant that thousands of people were not arrested and expelled. Plus, the Section 24 unit was no more. These actions helped to maintain the itinerant workforce for businesses. To discretely increase it, the agency continued issuing Rule 3(Q) passes for workers to crisscross the borders. On top of these actions, its infrastructure, as explained before, was not optimal for inspecting and detaining border crossers. With respect to Mexicanos, the secretary was directly involved. For instance, she ended a feud between agriculturalists and Mexican farmhands. She did not mince words: on one hand, “the farmers … wanted the army to come out and force them back to work at the point of a gun,” and on the other, “these poor, idle, mistreated fellows were also perfect bums … they would get the best of you if they could.” To resolve the problem, she standardized wages and conditions, which stabilized this workforce for businesses.Footnote 133 From 1933 to 1940, admissions from Mexico increased by 19 percent and deportations decreased by 50 percent;Footnote 134 7,258 Mexican day laborers also crossed the border.Footnote 135 As far as Canadiens, a group of New York-based manufacturing companies in Niagara Falls retained their workers.Footnote 136 The introduction of laborers was welcomed by the lumber industry as well, which routinely exploited migrants. In 1935, the agency reported that 15,000 Canadians trekked to northern New England to toil in lumber camps.Footnote 137 During this period, admissions from Canada increased by 75 percent and expulsions decreased by 32 percent;Footnote 138 12,613 Canadian day laborers also walked back and forth across the border.Footnote 139

The flows in Figures 2 and 4, particularly between 1936 and 1938, show that the Service tightened its functions, in part, to react to restrictionsts and, in part, because fissures emerged in the secretary’s control of the agency. First I discuss the pressures on the agency and then its reactions. Regarding the pressures, the INS carefully managed its statistics because the public worried about job competition from immigrants and restrictionists monitored their numbers. In 1935 the agency reported that “the problem of caring for the unemployed has not been aggravated by an influx of aliens to compete in the labor market.” The following year it represented that there was “a virtual balance … between total admissions and total departures.”Footnote 140 However, in 1935 the American Coalition, an umbrella organization of 105 patriotic and civic associations, sent FDR a grievance of Perkins’s administration. The Coalition objected to the admission of refugee children from Germany as based on a loose legal interpretation and the elimination of the Section 24 squad.Footnote 141 These more than 100 groups, like Wood and Waterman contend about the means pressure groups use, lobbied the president to reverse Secretary Perkins. A related series of public critiques involved a deportation case that she oversaw, between 1934 and 1939, of immigrant labor leader Harry Bridges. He had led strikes by the longshoremen on the West Coast and was alleged to have been a communist; she could have deported him for subversive activities but delayed a decision to benefit from court judgments on a related case.Footnote 142 Kristen Downey notes that the Bridges matter earned the secretary criticisms by the public and in the press, as well as a congressional investigation and an impeachment resolution.Footnote 143

In reaction, the INS adjusted resources to expand enforcement activities, though staff went further to push out more people. Regarding debarment, Figure 1 shows that expenditures and employees increased: starting in 1935, reaching an apex in 1936, and becoming static in 1937. Figure 2 depicts increased admissions during the period, except in 1940, and debarments generally following the same trend. A comparison of these numbers connotes similar trends among employees and debarments during the period, with the exception of 1939 when staffing increased and debarments decreased. This decrease might have been because staff was overwhelmed by admissions, which were the highest during this period, at 268,331.

In terms of deportation, in 1936 MacCormack modified the rule on staff’s power to arrest. On its face, the change was relatively minor, as it specified the administrators who could designate staff to execute warrants. But, in practice he reversed the prohibition on warrantless arrests from 1933 because officers were advised that they could make such arrests as long as they witnessed the individuals unlawfully entering America.Footnote 144 Figure 4 shows that this revision coincided with increased deportations in 1936 and 1938, with a decrease in 1937. Otherwise, a comparison of Figures 1, 3, and 4 does not show similar trends for expenditures, employees, net immigration, and deportations, except in 1934 and 1936 when these four indicators decreased and increased, respectively.Footnote 145 Figure 4 further shows that voluntary departures increased between 1936 and 1939 and repatriations sharply increased from 1937 to 1939. The increases suggest that with one less constraint, staff members intensified their use of these three enforcement tools. Also, Kelly Lytle Hernandez contends that MacCormack was unable to purge some of the “old-timers,” who worked on the borders, and they negatively swayed new recruits.Footnote 146 Regarding deportations, Kang points out that some bureaucrats deviated from the agency’s reforms.Footnote 147 As noted earlier, Goodman asserts that voluntary departures were a quick, informal way to expel people.Footnote 148 Relatedly, the repatriation numbers are telling of staff’s harsh preferences; in 1937 the immigration laws were amended to make the repatriated ineligible to reapply for admission. This condition insinuates that staff used this tool to bar people from returning, as voluntary departures gave them the option to reenter.Footnote 149 In comparison, as seen in this figure, the numbers for repatriations expanded.

INS TRANSFERRED TO JUSTICE

With the last step of my framework, I explain the transfer of the INS from the Labor Department to the Justice Department in 1940. Inside the agency, Secretary Perkins’s reform efforts were waning, as reflected by a report she had commissioned. In her autobiography, she claims to have repeatedly recommended that the agency be moved out of her department, which was “swamped” by the Service.Footnote 150 Outside the agency, it was deemed a risk to national security. Lawmakers and Roosevelt considered the INS lax on enforcement and fretted about the prospect of America entering World War II.Footnote 151 Congress and the State Department pushed for this transfer. For political control theory, the Service’s demise provides an opportunity to assess the relative strengths of some of the structural tools from the literature, such as political appointments, as well as the possible lifespan of a such an agency. Moe theorizes that the politics of structural choice is a perpetual process,Footnote 152 yet the INS, as conceived, ended.

An internal review of the INS that she initiated in 1938 indicated that Perkins’s control had slipped. This review, which resulted in a report tendered to her days before the president announced the relocation of the agency in 1940, largely critiqued its deportation process. The committee that was conducting the study opined that centralized control over arrest warrants had exposed the process to staff manipulation. When staff members requested warrants, in many instances they did so via telegraph, which allowed them to obtain the warrants while providing little information to headquarters.Footnote 153 As part of this concern, the committee recommended a reorganization of the agency, which included decentralizing control of this process. The committee further proposed the creation of an executive officer position at headquarters. Perkins implemented this proposal.Footnote 154 In making it, the committee reasoned that coordination of agency activities previously undertaken by MacCormack should be performed by this officer.Footnote 155 Yet, the report is silent about his successor, James Houghteling, who ran the Service from 1937—after MacCormack’s death—to 1940. In short, the report was also a reflection of the new commissioner’s leadership.Footnote 156 Relatedly, Stewart makes a critical observation about the difference between them: “[t]he former [c]ommissioner had tended to do what he thought right if there was no law forbidding it. The new [c]ommissioner looked for a law to give permission first.”Footnote 157 In other words, the incumbent was passive. All these circumstances intimate that the secretary’s control over the agency may well have been firmer under MacCormack. Plus, the report does not appreciate the discretion employed by staff, as noted above by Calavita, Ettinger, Goodman, Hernandez, and Kang, to capriciously enforce immigration rules.

Congress and the State Department undermined the secretary’s leadership of the Service. As referenced earlier, lawmakers investigated and sought to impeach her. In 1937 Representative Martin Dies (D-TX) led an inquiry on “un-American activities” and reported that “Nazi-Fa[s]cist groups” freely engaged in subversion. His committee concluded “that the failure of the Labor Department to carry out the laws with respect to deportation [was] a contributing factor.”Footnote 158 Two years later, Representative J. Parnell Thomas (R-NJ) introduced House Resolution 67 to impeach her for, in part, failing to deport Bridges. Although this motion was rejected by the HouseFootnote 159 and the Supreme Court subsequently vindicated her by determining that expulsion was unjustified,Footnote 160 legislators second-guessed the deportation process: “the confidence of the people in the proper administration of the laws … has been profoundly shaken.”Footnote 161 Along this line of attack, and the previously mentioned Labor–State tensions, in 1940 Undersecretary Sumner Welles urged FDR to move the INS to Justice because Labor had a “duality of interest” between managing the labor market and immigration enforcement.Footnote 162 Although she had misgivings—the Justice Department was ultimately not the appropriate place for the Service because it dealt with “human affairs”—FDR presented Reorganization Plan No. V to Congress, which approved it in June 1940.Footnote 163 He publicly promised “more effective control over aliens” and that INS would provide for the “nation’s safety.”Footnote 164

CONCLUSION

In her statement to Congress against impeachment, Secretary Perkins justified easing immigration enforcement at Labor: “I have imposed restraints upon the arbitrary use of this power, and I have sought to build and maintain confidence in our institutions by proceeding in cases with scrupulous fairness.”Footnote 165 According to DeLysa Burnier, the impeachment resolution, and other attacks she faced, marginalized Perkins. Burnier contends further that, in the discipline of public administration, the secretary was a “devalued subject” because by “profession and gender” she was a “settlement woman.” This discipline had focused on the “bureau men” of the Roosevelt administration, including their reorganization of the executive branch. Thus, my narrative “provid[es] counter-readings … to what appear to be settled knowledges and practices.”Footnote 166 Her reconfiguration of the bureaus of Immigration and Naturalization between 1933 and 1940 receives little attention in the political control and immigration policy history literatures. Below, I discuss the insights that the use of the analytical framework of policy innovation through bureaucratic reorganization adds to these literatures, especially as I used the former to elucidate the latter.

With the first step of this framework (from the evolution phase), we can understand how Perkins adjusted the agency’s resources to ease and tighten debarments and deportations. Zolberg argues that prior institutional capabilities constrained policy makers. However, as explained above, through a combination of structural devices, she loosened the constraints and liberalized these activities. For example, the structural devices, such as political appointees, facilitated the processing of more Rule 25(A) permits to help Jews with American kin escape the Third Reich. The noted record from a district office confirms this development. By delving into the weeds of this bureaucracy—something political control theory has undervalued—we realize that the admission process was not practically “impenetrable,” as Tichenor asserts.Footnote 167

Perkins employed the same devices for immigration restriction, except that funding and staffing did not have as much influence on deportations as they did for debarments. In particular, MacCormack reversed the decision prohibiting warrantless arrests, which not only resulted in increased deportations but also allowed staff to intensify voluntary departures and repatriations. We can infer that, after MacCormack’s passing, Houghteling—as a political appointee—did not maintain the centralized control Perkins had established. Contrary to the criticism that political control theory overvalues political influence, this case reveals that such power was affected by staff discretion, which Ettinger contends was developed before 1933. By tracing bureaucratic structure and policy outputs to political control, we can learn how this control can be used to quickly change the direction of outputs; Whitford argues output shifts can occur when Congress and the president compete for control.Footnote 168 This research helps make sense of the seemingly contradictory and conflicting nature of immigration policy.

The second step of the framework, coalition management, elucidates the agency’s dynamic, yet limited, responses to lobby pressures for and against immigration. These responses have implications for political control theory, as Macey asserts that such pressures can be assuaged through bureaucratic structure as designed at an agency’s inception.Footnote 169 As explained above, INS’ enforcement activities were eased in response to Jewish advocacy groups, industrialists, and agriculturalists, as more newcomers entered and remained in America. Conversely, the Service reacted to the more than 100 associations that complained to FDR about its laxity. These shifts in policy outputs fall outside Macey’s perspective because resources were adjusted after the agency’s commencement. Thus, outputs can be altered in real time, affording flexibility to political appointees to react to interest groups. But, as this case also shows, managing interest groups had limits. For Jews, the INS could not respond to those who clamored for comprehensive immigration policy reform. Also, after Kristallnacht the agency’s incremental efforts were insufficient. Indeed, other liberalizers in the Roosevelt administration like Morgenthau, Harold Ickes, and Eleanor Roosevelt advocated to relocate refugees to places outside the US mainland.Footnote 170 With respect to Mexican laborers, the issuance of Rule 3(Q) passes continued the inequitable practice of making them an itinerant workforce. Hernandez contends that immigration officers controlled this workforce.Footnote 171 Even the pivot to restriction had repercussions, as staff redoubled its activities to push people out.

The third step of my framework, system redesign, helps us to appreciate the catalyst for the Service’s redesign and its lifespan. In terms of INS’ demise, the primary consideration for FDR and Congress was that, as WWII loomed, its immigration enforcement functions compromised national security. That was the disparate impact of easing immigration. By the numbers, Figure 3 depicts that net immigration increased by 28,875. On top of that, 19,871 day laborers entered between 1935 and 1940.Footnote 172 These data represent a fraction of the 132 million Americans in 1940.Footnote 173 Still, this case makes clear that INS was a temporary structural solution to immigration restriction. The temporary nature of the INS merits further study. Moe contends that structural politics is perpetual. In contrast, the agency had a life of seven years in the Department of Labor. This implication requires more research. For instance, the only other time the bureaus of Immigration and Naturalization were combined was in 1906, and they were disbanded in 1913. Moreover, such research is important for political control theory, as he argues it has pushed structural politics aside. Moe urges scholars to “push against constraints … be open to abnormal ideas and think actively about shifting the theory onto new paths that might be more productive.”Footnote 174

Speaking of out-of-the-box ideas, the timing of reconsidering Secretary Frances Perkins’s leadership on immigration policy is apropos. The pandemic we are living through has laid bare and exacerbated the inequities produced by our public institutions. The statement from her impeachment defense is instructive: Perkins wanted the bureaucracy to treat people fairly. Her reorganization of the immigration system in the United States was a way to do that. For a brief period, she made this system more democratically accountable to the minority, when immigration restrictionists in the majority in Congress opposed passing comprehensive legislation to protect foreigners from persecution. Therefore, Secretary Perkins’s efforts are an example of going against the grain to make public institutions more equitable.

Footnotes

I thank the anonymous reviewers and this journal’s editorial team for their feedback on and support of this article.

References

NOTES

1. Resolution for an Investigation of the Official Conduct of Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor; James L. Houghteling, Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization Service, Department of Labor; and Gerard D. Reilly, Solicitor, Department of Labor, to Determine Whether or Not They Have Been Guilty of Any High Crimes or Misdemeanors Which, in the Contemplation of the Constitution, Requires the Interposition of the Constitutional Powers of the House, H.R. 311 76th Cong. (1939).

2. Zolberg, Aristide R., A Nation by Design: Immigration Policy in the Fashioning of America (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), 271–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3. Tichenor, Daniel J., Dividing Lines: The Politics of Immigration Control in America (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002), 158–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4. Zucker, Bat-Ami, “Frances Perkins and the German-Jewish Refugees, 1933–1940,” American Jewish History 89, no. 1 (2001): 3559 Google Scholar; Kraut, Alan M., Breitman, Richard, and Imhoof, Thomas W., “The State Department, the Labor Department, and German Jewish Immigration, 1930-1940,” Journal of American Ethnic History 3, no. 2 (April 1, 1984): 538 Google Scholar.

5. Stewart, Barbara MacDonald, United States Government Policy on Refugees from Nazism, 1933-1940 (New York: Garland Publishing, 1982), 568–69Google Scholar.

6. Zucker, “Frances Perkins and the German-Jewish Refugees, 1933–1940,” 37–38; Rebecca Brenner Graham, “No Refuge,” Contingent Magazine, August 23, 2019, https://contingentmagazine.org/2019/08/23/no-refuge/.

7. Ngai, Mae M., Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2004), 8286 Google Scholar; Pitkin, Thomas M., Keepers of the Gate: A History of Ellis Island (New York: New York University Press, 1975), 166 Google Scholar.

8. Ettinger, Patrick W., Imaginary Lines: Border Enforcement and the Origins of Undocumented Immigration, 1882-1930 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2009), 163 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9. Calavita, Kitty, Inside the State: The Bracero Program, Immigration, and the I.N.S. (New Orleans: Quid Pro, 2010), 12 Google Scholar.

10. Goodman, Adam, The Deportation Machine: America’s Long History of Expelling Immigrants (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2020), 3739 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11. Hernandez, Kelly Lytle, Migra!: A History of the U.S. Border Patrol (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010), 5455 Google Scholar.

12. Kang, S. Deborah, The INS on the Line: Making Immigration Law on the US-Mexico Border, 1917-1954 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017), 7586 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13. McCubbins, Mathew D., Noll, Roger G., and Weingast, Barry R., “Administrative Procedures as Instruments of Political Control,” Journal of Law, Economics & Organization 3, no. 2 (1987): 243–77Google Scholar; McCubbins, Mathew, Noll, Roger, and Weingast, Barry, “Structure and Process, Politics and Policy: Administrative Arrangements and the Political Control of Agencies,” Virginia Law Review 75, no. 2 (January 1, 1989): 431–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

14. Epstein, David and O’Halloran, Sharyn, Delegating Powers: A Transaction Cost Politics Approach to Policy Making under Separate Powers (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 78 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Their model includes lawmakers combining legislation as having some aspects as vague and others as detailed.

15. McCubbins, Noll, and Weingast, “Structure and Process, Politics and Policy,” 444, 472.

16. Wood, B. Dan and Bohte, John, “Political Transaction Costs and the Politics of Administrative Design,” The Journal of Politics 66, no. 1 (February 1, 2004): 183–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

17. Moe, Terry M., “The Politics of Bureaucratic Structure,” in Can the Government Govern? ed. Chubb, John E. and Peterson, Paul E. (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1989), 268 Google Scholar; Moe, Terry M., “The Politics of Structural Choice: Toward a Theory of Public Bureaucracy,” in Organization Theory: From Chester Barnard to the Present and Beyond, ed. Williamson, Oliver E. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 146–49.Google Scholar

18. Wood, B. Dan and Waterman, Richard W., “The Dynamics of Political Control of the Bureaucracy,” The American Political Science Review 85, no. 3 (1991): 821–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wood, B. Dan and Waterman, Richard W., “The Dynamics of Political-Bureaucratic Adaptation,” American Journal of Political Science 37, no. 2 (1993): 500–1CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Nou, Jennifer, “Intra-Agency Coordination,” Harvard Law Review 129, no. 2 (2015): 489–90Google Scholar; Whitford, Andrew B., “Decentralization and Political Control of the Bureaucracy,” Journal of Theoretical Politics 14, no. 2 (2002): 186–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Eisner, Marc Allen and Meier, Kenneth J., “Presidential Control versus Bureaucratic Power: Explaining the Reagan Revolution in Antitrust,” American Journal of Political Science 34, no. 1 (1990): 276–77, 282–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar. I consider these features part of the definition for structure provided by McCubbins et al., which is discussed later, because these features bear on resources and authority in public agencies.

19. Shapiro, Stuart, “Structure and Process: Examining the Interaction between Bureaucratic Organization and Analytical Requirements,” Review of Policy Research 34, no. 5 (September 2017): 683–86CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20. Moe, Terry M. and Wilson, Scott A., “Presidents and the Politics of Structure,” Law and Contemporary Problems 57, no. 2 (1994): 1519 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

21. Howell, William G. and Lewis, David E., “Agencies by Presidential Design,” The Journal of Politics 64, no. 4 (2002): 1111–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

22. Lewis, David E., “The Adverse Consequences of the Politics of Agency Design for Presidential Management in the United States: The Relative Durability of Insulated Agencies,” British Journal of Political Science 34, no. 3 (2004): 400–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

23. Neil V. Hernandez, “Immigration & Naturalization Policy Innovation through Bureaucratic Reorganization” (PhD diss., City University of New York Graduate Center, 2015).

24. The creation phase consists of four steps: crisis, policy making constraints, risks, and agency merger. Hernandez, “Immigration & Naturalization Policy Innovation,” 16.

25. Hernandez, “Immigration & Naturalization Policy Innovation,” 1–3, 16. In this paragraph and the prior one, I provide a definition of the liberal bureaucrat as making administrative decisions to loosen operational rules. In contrast, I see the restrictive bureaucrat as faithfully carrying out policies.

26. The reference to the years here, and subsequently for those references about data, is for the fiscal year running from July 1 of the prior year to June 30 of the noted year.

27. Marinari, Maddalena, Unwanted: Italian and Jewish Mobilization against Restrictive Laws, 1882-1965 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2020)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

28. Stewart, United States Government Policy on Refugees from Nazism, 1933-1940, 17.

29. Zolberg, A Nation by Design, 291.

30. Ngai, Impossible Subjects, 84.

31. Immigration Act of 1924, Pub. L. No. 68-139, 43 Stat. 153 (1924).

32. Twenty-First Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1933 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1934), 46, 53. This report indicates that the number of admissions in 1831 includes visitors.

33. Franklin D. Roosevelt, “White House Statement Summarizing Executive Order 6166,” in The American Presidency Project (website), ed. Gerard Peters and John T. Woolley, https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/white-house-statement-summarizing-executive-order-6166. In a manuscript of a speech she drafted in 1940, she noted that her department recommended the creation of the Service. Frances Perkins, “Memorandum of Accomplishments of the Immigration and Naturalization Service during the Fiscal Years July 1933 to July 1940, Inclusive (with corrections),” July 1940, 8, box 52, Frances Perkins Papers, Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Columbia University in the City of New York (hereafter cited as FPP-RBMC). Also, she met with FDR in the Oval Office the day he made the announcement. “June 10th, 1933,” Franklin D. Roosevelt Day by Day: A Project of the Pare Lorentz Center at the FDR Presidential Library, http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/daybyday/daylog/june-10th-1933/.

34. Martin, George, Madam Secretary, Frances Perkins (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1976), 245 Google Scholar.

35. Frances Perkins, “Address before the Commonwealth Club of California: ‘Deportations of Aliens,’” 19 February 1940, 15–16, box 52, FPP-RBMC.

36. Frances Perkins, interview by Dean Albertson, Columbia University (1955): pt. 4, sess. 1, 254.

37. Twenty-Second Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1934 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1935), 47.

38. Moe, “The Politics of Bureaucratic Structure,” 281. Alternatively, Andrew Whitford contends that “decentralization of responsibility and authority over policy formulation and implementation involves a net loss of political control.” Whitford, “Decentralization and Political Control of the Bureaucracy,” 167.

39. To FDR, she described the commissioner as a resourceful doer: “Col. MacCormack is a man of ingenuity and extremely practical, as well as forceful in handling all administrative problems.” Frances Perkins to Franklin D. Roosevelt, 15 March 1933, 2, Official file box 1, Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, Hyde Park (hereafter cited as FDRL).

40. “Daniel W. MacCormack,” U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, September 27, 2013, http://www.uscis.gov/history-and-genealogy/our-history-24.

41. Frances Perkins to Franklin D. Roosevelt, 15 March 1933.

42. Perkins, “Address before the Commonwealth Club of California: ‘Deportations of Aliens,’” 16–17.

43. Nou, “Intra-Agency Coordination,” 422–24.

44. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 47.

45. Moe, “The Politics of Bureaucratic Structure,” 282–84.

46. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 47.

47. MacCormack, Daniel W., The Spirit of the Service (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1934), 1Google Scholar.

48. Van Vleck, William C., The Administrative Control of Aliens: A Study in Administrative Law and Procedure (New York: Da Capo Press, 1971), 54, 251Google Scholar.

49. Uhl, Byron H., Immigration Procedure at Seaports (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1934), 4Google Scholar.

50. MacCormack, The Spirit of the Service, 4.

51. Oppenheimer, Reuben and Wickersham, George W., Report on the Enforcement of the Deportation Laws of the United States (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1931), 177 Google Scholar.

52. Brown, W. W. and Charles, R. M., Warrant and Deportation Procedure (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1934), 3 Google Scholar.

53. MacCormack, The Spirit of the Service, 4.

54. Ngai, Impossible Subjects, 83.

55. Eisner and Meier, “Presidential Control versus Bureaucratic Power: Explaining the Reagan Revolution in Antitrust,” 271, 275–77, 282–84.

56. Immigration Laws: Immigration Rules and Regulations of January 1, 1930, as Amended up to and including December 31, 1936 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1937), 133.

57. Uhl, Immigration Procedure at Seaports, 5–6.

58. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 62; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1940 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1940), 107. In 1933 the data for those debarred due to the public charge clause was not in the annual report for the INS.

59. Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1936 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1936), 96; Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1940 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1941), 108.

60. Moe and Wilson, “Presidents and the Politics of Structure,” 18–19.

61. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 54. German nationals in the United States were among the top ethnic groups becoming Americans. Of those issued citizenship papers from 1934 to 1940—a total of 1,125,006—the top five former nationalities were (with their numbers in parentheses) the British Empire (300,137), Italy (171,523), Germany (141,081), Poland (124,901), and the Soviet Union (69,052). Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 115; Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1937 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1938), 103; Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1941 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1942), 115. The German nationals included Jews, whose share of immigration increased from 10.3 percent to 52.2 percent between 1933 and 1940. By way of comparison, Italians did not seem to stimulate immigration via naturalization. The percentage of Italians, as a share of total immigration, declined slightly from 7.9 percent to 7.8 percent from 1933 to 1940. Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1935 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1935), 102; Statistical Abstract, 1941, 111. This data aligns with Marinari’s assertion that Italians resisted US citizenship. Marinari, Unwanted: Italian and Jewish Mobilization against Restrictive Laws, 1882-1965, 4–5.

62. Based on family ties, the laws allowed some immigrants to be exempt from the quota requirements or to avoid long waits for quota-visas. Immigration Laws and Rules of January 1, 1930, with Amendments from January 1, 1930 to May 24, 1934 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1935), 179. This regulation was an important option for those trying to flee the Reich.

63. In 1933, 10,254 immigrants received nonquota or preference visas through their citizen relatives. Twenty-First Annual Report, 1933, 63. Between 1934 and 1940 the average number of these individuals was 15,046. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 70; Twenty-Third Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1935 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1936), 94; Twenty-Fourth Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1936 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1936), 103; Twenty-Fifth Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1937 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1937), 93; Twenty-Sixth Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1938 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1938), 108–9; Twenty-Seventh Annual Report of the Secretary of Labor for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1939 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1939), 106; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 117. The total number of immigrants from 1933 to 1940 was 395, 716. Statistical Abstract, 1941, 107.

64. W. G. Strench to James L. Houghteling, 22 December 1938, box 17W3, Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, Record Group 85, National Archives Building, Washington, DC (hereafter cited as INS-NA).

65. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 59; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 103. In 1933 total immigration from Germany was 1,919. Statistical Abstract, 1936, 99. Between 1934 and 1940, the average annual number of admissions was 14,426. Statistical Abstract, 1936, 99; Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1938 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1939), 100; Statistical Abstract, 1941, 110. As far as Jews coming from the Reich, the INS had not provided their numbers in its annual report for 1933. For the period from 1934 to 1940, the growth is notable considering that only 45 German Jews had reportedly come to the United States in 1932. Annual Report of the Commissioner General of Immigration to the Secretary of Labor, Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1932 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1932), 84.

66. In December 1936, the State Department notified some of its “consulates that they had occasionally interpreted the LPC provision improperly.” “More liberal instructions” were issued in January 1937. Kraut, Breitman, and Imhoof, “The State Department, the Labor Department, and German Jewish Immigration, 1930-1940,” 18–19.

67. Immigration Laws: Immigration Rules and Regulations of January 1, 1930, as Amended up to and including December 31, 1936, 136–37.

68. Rule 3(C) permitted issuance of the cards for border crossers to work in the United States. Immigration Laws and Rules of January 1, 1930, with Amendments from January 1, 1930 to May 24, 1934, 121, 130–30A. This rule was amended by immigration officials to preclude them and it was sustained by the Supreme Court. Karnuth v. United States, 279 U.S. 231 (1929). This case involved Canadians coming over the border to work.

69. Wilmoth, G. C., Mexican Border Procedure (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1934), 17 Google Scholar.

70. Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturalization Service for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1944 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1944), 81. In 1935 the Labor Department ceased making this data public. Twenty-Third Annual Report, 1935. The numbers of migrant workers allowed to enter under Perkins’s watch was not apparently disclosed until the INS issued its 1944 report, well after she was no longer in charge of it.

71. Perkins, “Deportations of Aliens,” 53–54.

72. Frances Perkins, “The Relation of the Immigration and Naturalization Service to the Department of Labor,” 1939, 1, box 51, FPP-RBMC.

73. Twenty-First Annual Report, 1933, 19–20.

74. G. C. Haas, “Memorandum on the Business Situation,” 23 December 1935, 1–2, 4–5, Subject file box 118, FDRL. In the same year, INS reported that there were “increased opportunities for employment.” Twenty-Third Annual Report, 1935, 96. Then in 1936 it indicated that emigration from the United States “may be checked by the improvement of economic conditions.” Twenty-Fourth Annual Report, 1936, 89.

75. Ettinger, Imaginary Lines, 163–65.

76. Eisner and Meier, “Presidential Control versus Bureaucratic Power: Explaining the Reagan Revolution in Antitrust,” 269–71, 284.

77. Oppenheimer and Wickersham, Report on the Enforcement of the Deportation Laws of the United States, 178.

78. Kang, The INS on the Line, 76–77.

79. Perkins, “Deportations of Aliens,” 23–24.

80. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 50–51.

81. Pressman, Jeffrey L. and Wildavsky, Aaron B., Implementation: How Great Expectations in Washington Are Dashed in Oakland; or, Why It’s Amazing That Federal Programs Work At All, This Being a Saga of the Economic Development Administration as Told by Two Sympathetic Observers Who Seek to Build Morals on a Foundation of Ruined Hopes (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984), 69, 118Google Scholar.

82. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 50–51.

83. Twenty-First Annual Report, 1933, 53; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 107, 110.

84. Goodman, The Deportation Machine, 37–40.

85. Wood and Waterman, “The Dynamics of Political-Bureaucratic Adaptation,” 523–25.

86. Immigration Act of 1917, Pub. L. No. 64-301, 39 Stat. 874 (1917).

87. Report of the Activities of Section 24 Officers, 1930-1932, n.d., 2–5, box 84, FPP-RBMC.

88. Frances Perkins interview, pt. 4, sess. 1, 205, 207, 213.

89. Report of the Activities of Section 24 Officers, 1930-1932, 4–5. The effort in Detroit resulted in the removal of 15 individuals.

90. Frances Perkins interview, pt. 4, sess. 1, 214–15.

91. Frances Perkins, “Section 24 Telegrams,” 14 March 1933, box 4, FPP-RBMC. The secretary credited Robe Carl White, a Labor Department official, with the idea.

92. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 74.

93. The Head tax was collected from new arrivals and naturalization fees were paid by immigrants who filed applications to become US citizens. Twenty-First Annual Report, 1933, 64, 83.

94. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 47.

95. Memorandum by I. F. Wixon to the Chief Clerk, 16 March 1934, box 17W3, INS-NA.

96. The data for expenditures and employees in 1933 is combined from the bureaus of Immigration and Naturalization. Twenty-First Annual Report, 1933, 23, 25; Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 32–34; Twenty-Third Annual Report, 1935, 48, 50; Twenty-Fourth Annual Report, 1936, 52, 55; Twenty-Fifth Annual Report, 1937, 42, 55; Twenty-Sixth Annual Report, 1938, 55, 75; Twenty-Seventh Annual Report, 1939, 47, 66; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 52, 75.

97. Statistical Abstract, 1941, 107–8.

98. McCubbins, Noll, and Weingast, “Structure and Process, Politics and Policy,” 431–32.

99. Twenty-Seventh Annual Report, 1939, 89.

100. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 72.

101. Pitkin, Keepers of the Gate, 160–61, 169.

102. Twenty-Fifth Annual Report, 1937, 85; Twenty-Sixth Annual Report, 1938, 96; Twenty-Seventh Annual Report, 1939, 90; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 103.

103. Ellis Island Committee, Report of the Ellis Island Committee (New York: n.p., 1934), 14, 41–42, http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/view/4847871.

104. The program was ambitious, as it consisted of 59 buildings. Design and construction took place between 1930 and 1943. U.S. General Services Administration, U.S. Border Inspection Stations, July 2011 (Washington, DC: Public Buildings Service, Center for Historic Buildings), 3, 5. This report was provided courtesy of the U.S. General Services Administration, Public Buildings Service, Center for Historic Buildings.

105. U.S. Department of the Treasury, Report on Standard Type of Customs-Immigration Inspection Buildings for Border Highways, March 13, 1928, 2–5. This report was provided courtesy of the U.S. General Services Administration, Public Buildings Service, Center for Historic Buildings.

106. This number was the annual average of border crossers (who were “aliens”) between 1933 and 1940. The Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturalization Service for the Year Ended June 30, 1972 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1972), 72.

107. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 60–61.

108. There were 20 other buildings, but these were “ancillary:” They were garages, residences, and pump houses. U.S. General Services Administration, U.S. Border Inspection Stations MPS (Washington, DC: Public Buildings Service, Center for Historic Buildings, n.d.). This report was provided courtesy of the U.S. General Services Administration, Public Buildings Service, Center for Historic Buildings.

109. Of the three types of designs, only property type number 3 had specific spaces for detention and hearing rooms. U.S. Border Inspection Stations MPS, 5–6, 9–11. The General Services Administration opines that in property type number 2 sites there may have been capacity for detention. U.S. Border Inspection Stations MPS, 24–25. Yet, in 1932 the Treasury Department rejected requests by immigration officials who tried to add spaces for imprisonment and inquiries. W. W. Husband to Treasury Secretary, 19 September 1932, U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Immigration. The then labor secretary advised the immigration commissioner to comply with Treasury’s directive. “Communication of the Chief Clerk to the Commissioner General of Immigration,” 29 September 1932, U.S. Department of Labor. Both of these documents were provided courtesy of the U.S. General Services Administration, Public Buildings Service, Center for Historic Buildings.

110. Meier, Kenneth J. and O’Toole, Laurence J., “Political Control versus Bureaucratic Values: Reframing the Debate,” Public Administration Review 66, no. 2 (2006): 177 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

111. Wood and Waterman, “The Dynamics of Political Control of the Bureaucracy,” 822.

112. Statistical Abstract, 1941, 107.

113. Statistical Abstract, 1941, 108. Twenty-First Annual Report, 1933, 53; Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 63, 65; Twenty-Third Annual Report, 1935, 90–91; Twenty-Fourth Annual Report, 1936, 99–100; Twenty-Fifth Annual Report, 1937, 90; Twenty-Sixth Annual Report, 1938, 100; Twenty-Seventh Annual Report, 1939, 95; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 107. Between 1936 and 1940, the numbers for repatriations, according to this report, does not include Filipinos. There was a specific law that provided for their return to the Philippines. Twenty-Fourth Annual Report, 1936, 103.

114. Zolberg, A Nation by Design, 7–8, 14–15, 21; Tichenor, Dividing Lines, 8–10, 34.

115. Marinari, Unwanted, 2, 6–7.

116. Wood and Waterman, “The Dynamics of Political-Bureaucratic Adaptation,” 507–8; Moe, “The Politics of Bureaucratic Structure,” 269–73.

117. Macey, Jonathan R., “Organizational Design and Political Control of Administrative Agencies,” Journal of Law, Economics & Organization 8, no. 1 (1992): 93–94, 108–9Google Scholar. Also, Jonathan Koppell claims that the structure of organizations can shape the preferences of lobbies, though he focuses on government-sponsored entities. Koppell, Jonathan G. S., “Hybrid Organizations and the Alignment of Interests: The Case of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,” Public Administration Review 61, no. 4 (2001): 472–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

118. Wyman, David S., Paper Walls: America and the Refugee Crisis 1938-1941 (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1968)Google Scholar. For instance, he found that this process caused cases to be delayed and, as a consequence, there was a backlog. Wyman, Paper Walls, 197.

119. Kraut, Breitman, and Imhoof, “The State Department, the Labor Department, and German Jewish Immigration, 1930-1940,” 6, 9, 13, 26.

120. Stewart, United States Government Policy on Refugees from Nazism, 1933-1940, 101. In 1933, Morgenthau was chairman of the Federal Farm Board. “Americans and the Holocaust: Henry Morgenthau Jr.,” United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust/personal-story/henry-morgenthau-jr.

121. Breitman, Richard and Lichtman, Allan J., FDR and the Jews (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 2013), 3 Google Scholar.

122. Marinari, Unwanted, 2.

123. Report of the Ellis Island Committee, iii, 41–43.

124. FDR even advised Americans to pursue the Rule 25(A) tactic. He told Kostaq Ziu to marry his fiancée, Urania Shandro, from Albania to bring her to the United States. The president noted that “the Albanian quota [was] mortgaged for several years.” Franklin D. Roosevelt to Kostaq Ziu (correspondence summary), 13 March 1940, Official files 15F-15L, box 8, FDRL.

125. Marinari, Unwanted, 5.

126. Downey notes that Perkins allowed Jews from Germany to enter the United States as “visitors” with temporary tourist visas and that some of them managed to disappear within the United States. Downey, Kirstin, The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life and Legacy of Frances Perkins, Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, and the Minimum Wage (New York: Anchor Books, 2010), 194–95Google Scholar. Because the expulsion process was diminished, they were safer during her tenure.

127. Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal, 286–87. All this work by Perkins also supported the president; Breitman and Lichtman note that he “preferred to handle any adjustment of immigration policy behind closed doors” in the early part of his presidency. Breitman and Lichtman, FDR and the Jews, 83. In one example, regarding a deportation, the president directed the State Department to temporarily halt the deportation of J. F. Normano. FDR’s reasoning was that “the sole problem seems to be [the] advisability of submitting a Jew to German jurisdiction.” Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Radio Message from Franklin D. Roosevelt to William Phillips (correspondence summary),” 23 June 1933, Official files 76 and 76c, box 4, FDRL. In this case, he was lobbied by B’nai B’rith. Alfred M. Cohen, “B’nai B’rith to Franklin D. Roosevelt (correspondence summary),” 7 July 1933, Official files 76 and 76c, box 4, FDRL.

128. The idea of using workers from Mexico and Canada was not new to the Labor Department or President Roosevelt. When he was the assistant Navy secretary during World War I, he was part of the National War Labor Policies Board, which planned for the “importation of agricultural and other labor for temporary periods, incident to keeping up production of farm products, particularly in the West and Southwest.” Also, the Immigration Bureau was supposed to bring “skilled men for the manufacture of munitions and other war materials, in cooperation with the Canadian Department of Immigration and Colonization.” “Work of the Department of Labor,” n.d., box 77, FPP-RBMC.

129. Zolberg, A Nation by Design, 269; Tichenor, Dividing Lines, 150–51.

130. Theodore G. Holcombe, “Immigration Restriction League to Samuel Dickstein,” 10 March 1934, box 235, Records of the United States House of Representatives, Record Group 233, National Archives Building, Washington, DC (hereafter cited as HR-NA).

131. Thompson, John H. and Randall, Stephen J., Canada and the United States: Ambivalent Allies, 4th ed. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2008), 123 Google Scholar.

132. Interstate Migration: Report of the Select Committee to Investigate the Interstate Migration of Destitute Citizens, H.R. Rep. No. 369, at 114, 123, 375–76, 379 (1941).

133. Frances Perkins interview, pt. 4, sess. 1, 404, 411. The Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) enlarged its membership by bringing farmhands into the fold. In 1939, it denounced the “extreme exploitation and discrimination” of Mexicanos at the hands of “industry and agriculture.” At its convention, the CIO unanimously welcomed “them into the ranks of organized labor.” “Daily Proceedings of the Second Constitutional Convention,” Congress of Industrial Organizations, 12 October 1939, 37, box 3, FPP-RBMC.

134. In 1933 immigration from Mexico was 1,936 and for 1940 it was 2,313; expulsions to Mexico from 1933 to 1940 were 7,750 and 3,902, respectively. Statistical Abstract, 1935, 99; Statistical Abstract, 1941, 110; Twenty-Fifth Annual Report, 1937, 89; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 108.

135. This number is for the period between 1935 and 1940. Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1944, 81. As explained more fully below in these notes, the data for border crossers in 1933 and 1934 is not disaggregated to calculate the number of Mexicans working in the United States.

136. One of them, the Titanium Alloy Manufacturing Company, depended on its experienced staff to handle “a great amount of detail work.” R. S. Talor, “Titanium Ally Manufacturing Company to Samuel Dickstein,” 11 April 1934, box 73, HR-NA. Another one, the Spirella Company Inc., had a “considerable number of employees valuable on account of their long period of service.” Edwin Williams to Samuel Dickstein, 12 April 1934, box 73, HR-NA.

137. The agency pointed out that there was a demand for French-Canadian woodsmen, some of whom entered illegally, as their “competence is unquestioned.” Twenty-Third Annual Report, 1935, 96.

138. In 1933 immigration from Canada was 6,187 and for 1940 it was 10,806; expulsions to Canada from 1933 to 1940 were 7,750 and 3,902, respectively. Statistical Abstract, 1935, 99; Statistical Abstract, 1941, 110; Twenty-Fifth Annual Report, 1937, 89; Twenty-Eighth Annual Report, 1940, 108.

139. This number is for the period between 1935 and 1940. Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1944, 81. As mentioned above, these data are not available in disaggregated form for 1933 and 1934 to report on the numbers of Canadians who crossed the border to work in the United States.

140. Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 48; Twenty-Fourth Annual Report, 1936, 89.

141. John B. Trevor to Franklin D. Roosevelt, 23 January 1935, 1, 3, box 109, Records of the United States Senate, Record Group 46, National Archives Building, Washington, DC. The Coalition was technically correct about legal interpretation because bonds were posted for the children through an informal agreement among the Labor and State departments and the German-Jewish Children’s Aid. Memorandum by James L. Houghteling for the Second Assistant Labor Secretary, 20 October 1939, 1–2, box 17W3, INS-NA. This arrangement was unofficially endorsed by Congress. Kraut, Breitman, and Imhoof, “The State Department, the Labor Department, and German Jewish Immigration, 1930-1940,” 14.

142. Perkins, Frances, The Roosevelt I Knew (New York: Viking Press, 1946), 316–19Google Scholar.

143. Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal, 273–77.

144. Daniel W. MacCormack, “General Order No. 230,” 16 January 1936, box 17W3, INS-NA; Immigration Laws and Rules of January 1, 1930, with Amendments from January 1, 1930 to May 24, 1934, 188; Immigration Laws: Immigration Rules and Regulations of January 1, 1930, as Amended up to and including December 31, 1936, 197–98. To get around the requirement of witnessing newcomers who entered without permission, officers would “put a man in transit.” They would force the newcomer to leave his “shelter” to claim the newcomer continued to be engaged in an unlawful entry. The Immigration and Naturalization Service, the Secretary of Labor’s Committee on Administrative Procedure, (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1940), 73–76, https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=7bulmwEhhLwC&pg=GBS.PP4&hl=en.

145. Unlike debarments for which admissions are directly related, deportations are more difficult to analyze in relation to changes in the undocumented population. In 1935, the agency estimated that there were 3.5 to 10 million people who entered the United States without permission and, thus, were subject to deportation. Twenty-Third Annual Report, 1935, 78. However, the range of this estimate is broad. Therefore, I use the net immigration numbers, that is, the difference between immigrants and nonimmigrants who entered and departed the United States. As noted in this section of the article, the agency closely monitored net immigration. Also, I estimate that such numbers were more likely to trigger deportation activities depending on changes to the numbers.

146. Hernandez, Migra! 64, 67. It should be noted that the internal review of the INS, which was commissioned by Perkins (and discussed in the next section), considered border patrol officers to be excellent to the extent that some transferred to work as immigration inspectors. Also, this report indicates that one reason these officers stood out was because “the Patrol has a recruiting and training program possibly unexcelled in the Federal Government. It gets good men and trains them thoroughly.” The Immigration and Naturalization Service, 147–48. In sharp contrast, Hernandez has the opposite opinion regarding the Border Patrol’s training program between 1934 and 1937. Hernandez, Migra! 67.

147. Kang notes that in 1940, based on the internal review mentioned immediately before, there were tensions between “central office” and “field office procedure” regarding the deportations of the undocumented. This issue was due, in part, to the lack of an administrative manual, as policies and procedures were not centralized in one repository, nor were they updated. Kang, The INS on the Line, 82–86. This situation was apparently exacerbated by Perkins, who sent staff mixed messages. On one hand, she curbed deportations of the undocumented earlier in the period. On the other hand, the Service took the extraofficial action of issuing border-crossing cards to Mexicans and Canadians, who did not obtain visas, to work in the United States.

148. The process to permit a voluntary departure necessitated departmental approval according to the report prepared for Perkins of the internal review she initiated in 1938. The Immigration and Naturalization Service, 34. Thus, the processing of voluntary departures was not completely informal.

149. Twenty-Sixth Annual Report, 1938, 100, 102.

150. Perkins, The Roosevelt I Knew, 360–61.

151. Although the driving force for system redesign was national security, there were other important considerations. For one, liberal lawmakers appreciated the urgency of the Jewish plight after Kristallnacht in 1938. They advanced bills to save individuals and families. Relief of Sundry Aliens, H.R. 548 76th Cong. (1939), 2–4; Ernst Gottlieb, Wife Margot, and Daughter Mary, H.R. 2972 76th Cong. (1940), 1–2; Robert H. Jackson, Attorney General, to Samuel Dickstein, U.S. Representative, New York, 20 September 1940, 1, box 114, HR-NA. Also, in 1936 Congress pressed Perkins about the large numbers of migrant workers who crossed state lines; legislators were concerned about their social and economic needs. Study, Survey, and Investigation of Migratory Workers, S. Rep. 74-2396, at 1 (1936). Subsequently, she reported on notable social conditions that the migrant workers faced, including state officials not encouraging children to attend schools. Frances Perkins, “Press Release (Text of Letter to the Senate),” 4 July 1937, 2, 4–5, box 49, FPP-RBMC.

152. Moe, “The Politics of Bureaucratic Structure,” 284–85; Moe, “The Politics of Structural Choice: Toward a Theory of Public Bureaucracy,” 146.

153. The Immigration and Naturalization Service, 64–66.

154. Perkins, “Memorandum of Accomplishments of the Immigration and Naturalization Service,” 34–37.

155. The Immigration and Naturalization Service, 17–18, 62–66, 139–43.

156. MacCormack passed away on January 1, 1937. He was succeeded by Houghteling. “Daniel W. MacCormack: Commissioner General of Immigration-April 27, 1933–Aug. 9, 1933; Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization-August 10, 1933–Jan. 1, 1937,” U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, https://www.uscis.gov/history-and-genealogy/our-history/commissioners-and-directors/daniel-w-maccormack; “James L. Houghteling: Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization, August 26, 1937–July 31, 1940,” U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, https://www.uscis.gov/history-and-genealogy/our-history/commissioners-and-directors/james-l-houghteling.

157. Stewart, United States Government Policy on Refugees from Nazism, 1933-1940, 411–12.

158. Investigation of Un-American Activities and Propaganda: Report of the Special Committee on Un-American Activities, H.R. Rep. No. 282, at 120 (1939).

159. Resolution for an Investigation of the Official Conduct of Frances Perkins, 5–10.

160. Perkins, The Roosevelt I Knew, 319.

161. Resolution for an Investigation of the Official Conduct of Frances Perkins, 11.

162. Sumner Welles to Franklin D. Roosevelt, 18 May 1940, Official files 15F-15L, box 8, FDRL. Welles also argued for the elimination of “the exemption of certain categories of aliens from … undergoing consular examination and of obtaining a visa.” This point seems to take issue with the granting of Rule 25(A) passes, as discussed in the Reconfiguration of Labor’s Immigration Functions and the Balancing Act of Interests sections of this article.

163. Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal, 294–96; Perkins, The Roosevelt I Knew, 360–61; “Reorganization Plan No. V of 1940,” U.S. House of Representatives Office of the Law Revision Counsel United States Code, https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title5a-node84-leaf90&num=0&edition=prelim.

164. “Reorganization Plan No. V of 1940.”

165. Twenty-Seventh Annual Report, 1939, 214; Perkins, The Roosevelt I Knew, 319; 84 Cong. Rec. H3743–3745 (April 3, 1939) (statement of Secretary Perkins [February 8, 1939]).

166. Burnier, DeLysa, “Frances Perkins’ Disappearance from American Public Administration: A Genealogy of Marginalization,” Administrative Theory & Praxis 30, no. 4 (2008): 417–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

167. Tichenor, Dividing Lines, 151.

168. Whitford, Andrew B., “The Pursuit of Political Control by Multiple Principals,” The Journal of Politics 67, no. 1 (2005): 4446 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

169. Koppell asserts that the government-sponsored enterprises, like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, can manipulate interest groups. It should be noted that these organizations are hybrids—both public and private—and have power to influence these groups via private sector characteristics. For instance, he says these enterprises can devote money to political activities such as advertising. Jonathan G. S. Koppell, “Hybrid Organizations,” 469–71.

170. Wyman, Paper Walls, 112–13; Breitman and Lichtman, FDR and the Jews, 129–30.

171. Hernandez, Migra! 54–55.

172. Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1944, 81. The agency reports for 1933 and 1934 indicate that 174,049 Mexicans and Canadians crossed the borders to the United States with border crossing/identification cards, but these data are not disaggregated like the numbers provided between 1935 and 1940, which include those who crossed for employment, school attendance, and business or pleasure. Twenty-First Annual Report, 1933, 49; Twenty-Second Annual Report, 1934, 62.

173. This number is for those on the mainland. Statistical Abstract, 1940, 2.

174. Moe, Terry M., “Delegation, Control, and the Study of Public Bureaucracy,” The Forum 10, no. 2 (2012): 39 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

Figure 0

Figure 1. Expenditures (left scale) and Employees.96 (right scale)Source: Department of Labor.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Admissions (left scale) and Debarments.97 (right scale)Source: Department of Justice.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Net Immigration.112Source: Department of Justice.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Deportations, Voluntary Departures, and Repatriations.113Source: Department of Labor.Note: Figures in color in the online version only.