Trump Supports Plan to Cut Legal Immigration by Half
President Trump embraced a proposal on Wednesday to slash
legal immigration to the United States in half within a decade by sharply
curtailing the ability of American citizens and legal residents to bring family
members into the country.
The plan would enact the most far-reaching changes to the
system of legal immigration in decades and represents the president’s latest
effort to stem the flow of newcomers to the United States. Since taking office,
he has barred many visitors from select Muslim-majority countries, limited the
influx of refugees, increased immigration arrests and pressed to build a wall
along the southern border.
In asking Congress to curb legal immigration, Mr. Trump
intensified a debate about national identity, economic growth, worker fairness
and American values that animated his campaign last year. Critics said the
proposal would undercut the fundamental vision of the United States as a haven
for the poor and huddled masses, while the president and his allies said the
country had taken in too many low-skilled immigrants for too long to the
detriment of American workers.
“This legislation will not only restore our competitive edge
in the 21st century, but it will restore the sacred bonds of trust between
America and its citizens,” Mr. Trump said at a White House event alongside two
Republican senators sponsoring the bill. “This legislation demonstrates our
compassion for struggling American families who deserve an immigration system
that puts their needs first and that puts America first.”
In throwing his weight behind a bill, Mr. Trump added one
more long-odds priority to a legislative agenda already packed with them in the
wake of the defeat of legislation to repeal and replace President Barack
Obama’s health care program. The president has already vowed to overhaul the tax
code and rebuild the nation’s roads, airports and other infrastructure.
But by endorsing legal immigration cuts, a move he has long
supported, Mr. Trump returned to a theme that has defined his short political
career and excites his conservative base at a time when his poll numbers
continue to sink. Just 33 percent of Americans approved of his performance in
the latest Quinnipiac University survey, the lowest rating of his presidency,
and down from 40 percent a month ago.
Democrats and some Republicans quickly criticized the move.
“Instead of catching criminals, Trump wants to tear apart communities and
punish immigrant families that are making valuable contributions to our
economy,” said Tom Perez, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee.
“That’s not what America stands for.”
The bill, sponsored by Senators Tom Cotton of Arkansas and
David Perdue of Georgia, would institute a merit-based system to determine who
is admitted to the country and granted legal residency green cards, favoring
applicants based on skills, education and language ability rather than
relations with people already here. The proposal revives an idea included in
broader immigration legislation supported by President George W. Bush that died
in 2007.
More than one million people are granted legal residency
each year, and the proposal would reduce that by 41 percent in its first year
and 50 percent by its 10th year, according to projections cited by its
sponsors. The reductions would come largely from those brought in through
family connections. The number of immigrants granted legal residency on the basis
of job skills, about 140,000, would remain roughly the same.
Under the current system, most legal immigrants are admitted
to the United States based on family ties. American citizens can sponsor
spouses, parents and minor children for an unrestricted number of visas, while
siblings and adult children are given preferences for a limited number of visas
available to them. Legal permanent residents holding green cards can also
sponsor spouses and children.
In 2014, 64 percent of immigrants admitted with legal
residency were immediate relatives of American citizens or sponsored by family
members. Just 15 percent entered through employment-based preferences,
according to the Migration Policy Institute, an independent research
organization. But that does not mean that those who came in on family ties were
necessarily low skilled or uneducated.
The legislation would award points based on education,
ability to speak English, high-paying job offers, age, record of achievement
and entrepreneurial initiative. But while it would still allow spouses and
minor children of Americans and legal residents to come in, it would eliminate
preferences for other
relatives, like siblings and adult children. The bill would
create a renewable temporary visa for older-adult parents who come for
caretaking purposes.
The legislation would limit refugees offered permanent
residency to 50,000 a year and eliminate a diversity visa lottery that the
sponsors said does not promote diversity. The senators said their bill was
meant to emulate systems in Canada and Australia. The projections cited by the sponsors said legal immigration
would decrease to 637,960 after a year and to 539,958 after a decade. “Our current system does not work,” Mr. Perdue said. “It
keeps America from being competitive and it does not meet the needs of our
economy today.”
Mr. Cotton said low-skilled immigrants pushed down wages for
those who worked with their hands. “For some people, they may think that that’s
a symbol of America’s virtue and generosity,” he said. “I think it’s a symbol
that we’re not committed to working-class Americans, and we need to change
that.”
But Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina,
noted that agriculture and tourism were his state’s top two industries. “If
this proposal were to become law, it would be devastating to our state’s
economy, which relies on this immigrant work force,” he said. “Hotels, restaurants,
golf courses and farmers,” he added, “will tell you this proposal to cut legal
immigration in half would put their business in peril.”
Cutting legal immigration would make it harder for Mr. Trump
to reach the stronger economic growth that he has promised. Bringing in more
workers, especially during a time of low unemployment, increases the size of an
economy. Critics said the plan would result in labor shortages, especially in
lower-wage jobs that many Americans do not want.
The National Immigration Forum, an advocacy group, said the
country was already facing a work force gap of 7.5 million jobs by 2020.
“Cutting legal immigration for the sake of cutting immigration would cause
irreparable harm to the American worker and their family,” said Ali Noorani,
the group’s executive director.
Surveys show most Americans believe legal immigration
benefits the country. In a Galluppoll in January, 41 percent of Americans were satisfied with the
overall level of immigration, 11 percentage points higher than the year before
and the highest since the question was first asked in 2001. Still, 53 percent
of Americans remained dissatisfied.
The plan endorsed by Mr. Trump generated a fiery exchange at
the White House briefing when Stephen Miller, the president’s policy adviser
and a longtime advocate of immigration limits, defended the proposal. Pressed
for statistics to back up claims that immigration was costing Americans jobs,
he cited several studies that have been debated by experts.
“But let’s also use common sense here, folks,” Mr. Miller
said. “At the end of the day, why do special interests want to bring in more
low-skill workers?”He rejected the argument that immigration policy should also
be based on compassion. “Maybe it’s time we had compassion for American
workers,” he said.
When a reporter read him some of the words from the Statue of Liberty —
“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free” —
Mr. Miller dismissed them. “The poem that you’re referring to was added later,”
he said. “It’s not actually part of the original Statue of Liberty.”
He noted that in 1970, the United States allowed in only a
third as many legal immigrants as it now does: “Was that violating or not
violating the Statue of Liberty law of the land?”
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