Archive for the ‘Immigration Reform’ Category

Immigration Reform: Pictures, Videos, Breaking News

Far from offering a bold new immigration reform plan that would "make America great again," Trump's plan recycles anti-immigrant ideas that were resoundingly defeated 150 years ago.

Republicans and Democrats alike need the Hispanic vote to seal the deal. But not a single presidential candidate has spoken favorably about our issues. To the contrary, we have become a political issue ourselves, a "problem" to be "solved" by whomever seeks the Oval Office next year.

Rafael Salazar

Research consultant, freelance writer and politics junkie

Donald Trump dropped his long-awaited immigration position paper this week. To no one's surprise, it is a long list of restrictionist clichs about immigrants taking jobs, abusing welfare, and lowering wages for Americans. Here are the five biggest inaccuracies.

David Bier

Immigration Policy Analyst, Niskanen Center

For religious progressives, often wary to mesh partisan politics with faith, the old Constitutional belief that there should be no religious test for office holds firm.

Rev. Dr. Chuck Currie

Director of the Center for Peace and Spirituality and University Chaplain at Pacific University

Unchecked corruption within Customs and Border Protection must be part of any discussion regarding the US southern border. The time has come to talk about reforming the agency. The Obama administration has the means to move us forward and should do so immediately.

Christian Ramirez

Director, Southern Border Communities Coalition; Human Rights Director, Alliance San Diego

Bernie Sanders can win--not just the primary, but the general. Democrats should back him, and ignore the arguments made by Barney Frank and others, who say giving Hillary the nod early is the only hope for victory in 2016.

In an effort to keep migrants from entering Britain through Channel Tunnel trains, the British government has recently decided to increase security around the train line at Coquelles and in the French town of Calais on the other side of the channel by building fences.

Leading up to the debate, we've heard much rhetoric from Republican presidential hopefuls that feeds into negative, untrue stereotypes of undocumented individuals.

Lizet Ocampo

Associate Director of Immigration, Center for American Progress Action Fund

Our immigration system has put all of the cards in the hands of employers and allowed them to wield entirely too much power over millions of captive and exploitable workers in our labor force.

Rubio's stumping in Iowa and across the nation almost entirely in Spanish is, quite frankly, a slap in the face to the intelligence of Latino Americans. The GOP's hope is that he will beguile voters with the "we're so alike" rhetoric and shared stories of heritage that they will not notice that his platform is set against their best interests.

This will work out to a total of about 10 minutes for each candidate over the life of the show. Sounds more like an extended high school musical audition than any sort of serious effort to identify the policy proposals and positions, and test the temperament, of the persons now seeking the presidency on the GOP side.

Terry Connelly

Dean Emeritus, Ageno School of Business - Golden Gate University

In normal years, this would be the official kickoff to the political Silly Season. This year, however, is not normal, as instead we're right at the kickoff of Presidential Debate Season, and the votes are already in -- the silly subject we're all going to obsess over this year is named Donald Trump.

Donald Trump is just flyin' up those polls! Such an unexpected surprise and I couldn't be happier. We need more hate and nastiness in our elections to keep people honest...he'll be a great president.

Getting attached to friends and places is no longer reckless. Dating can now be on the table. Transitioning from a month-to-month to a long-term lease is now allowed. The feeling of not owning my future is gone.

Cristina Lopez G.

Salvadoran millennial living in DC, lawyer, policy wonk and professional eye-roller

Unlike Donald's politics of fear that appeals to our worst instinct, many New Yorkers see their undocumented neighbors as friends and family contributing to the state as opposed to an invading army of rapists.

He will never be president, but for those who have a chance, and for the party that aspires to retake the White House in 2016, the last few weeks have been a squandered opportunity.

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Immigration Reform: Pictures, Videos, Breaking News

Attorney: Immigration reform needs incremental approach

Ayensa Millan, Special for The Republic | azcentral.com 12:35 p.m. MST August 20, 2015

Ayensa Millan is CEO and founder of CIMA Law Group.(Photo: Ayensa Millan)

Immigration continues to be a divisive issue in American politics, but it does not have to be the case.

As comprehensive immigration reform has failed three times in the last 10 years, it becomes obvious that we need a different approach. It is time that Congress considers practical, incremental changes instead of the large-scale reform that some have been seeking.

Immigration reform will not only be good for the economy, but it is also in our nation's national security interest. It will keep our neighborhoods safer, decrease fear among communities and keep families together. Fixing our immigration system is the right thing to do.

BILL MONTGOMERY'SVIEW:Immigration reform starts with secure borders

In the United States, there are roughly 60 million visas issued annually, but only 3 million are for work. Part of the reason for this discrepancy is government bureaucracy. The process is complex.

Improving the process of obtaining work visas will rapidly stimulate the United States economy. Talented immigrants who want to open their own business or use their education and skills in the U.S. will have much more flexibility to do so. This reform would also reunite thousands of families who are separated as a result of visa backlog.

As Republican Congressman Erik Paulsen says, Its a product of our broken immigration system that we often kick out or turn away the best and brightest minds and force them to return to their home countries where they end up becoming our competitors.

Encouraging educated, talented people to stay in the U.S. after graduation is crucial for our national security. We should encourage immigrants with education, talent and drive to go on and grow businesses and create jobs. This will secure our nations position as an economic power and enhance our national security interests. Many of the tools and methods necessary to keep our country safe are created by educated, talented people that feel included by the society in which they reside.

The time has come to shift from a protectionist attitude to one of inclusion. For example, immigrants who want to study science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) here in the U.S., should be encouraged to stay once they complete their degrees. Losing STEM students as a result of a broken immigration system causes us to lose future innovations. Furthermore, sending STEM talent away as a result of a faulty immigration system puts us in danger.

Thousands of families live in fear of possibly having their lives abruptly disrupted as a result of one of their family member's immigration status. People seek economic opportunity and a better life, no matter where they live or where they are from. This has been the case throughout human history. However, today in the U.S., many immigrants become frustrated by a complicated and unresponsive immigration system. Many die as they make dangerous journeys in an attempt to find a better life. Any nation that allows this type of human suffering to continue fails at the most basic of moral obligations: to protect human life.

Reforming our immigration system is the right thing to do. It is a true moral test of our political will.

Finally, the notion that immigration reform is too controversial is a myth. The idea that it must be reformed by means of one all-inclusive federal bill is wrong. As we examine the many benefits to our economy, national security and future prosperity, it becomes clear that a series of phased-in gradual and practical solutions can be accomplished.

Ayensa Millan is CEO and founder of CIMA Law Group in Phoenix.

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Attorney: Immigration reform needs incremental approach

Donald Trump on immigration reform: Blame Mexico! | The …

"I'M A huge fan of the Mexican people," Donald Trump saidin an interview this weekendwith NBC's Chuck Todd. "But they have to pay for the wall."

Mr Trump,a real-estate mogul and the current front-runner in the race for the Republican presidential nomination, is such a fan of Mexicans that, in addition to promising to bully them into paying for a pharaonic American infrastructure project, accusing them of mooching off American taxpayers, and blaming them for low wages, unemployment and violent crime, he also proposes to amend the constitution to do away with birthright citizenship, so that children born inside America's borders will no longer be automatic citizens. He would make it harder for Mexicans to come to America lawfully and relentlessly deport those in the country without papers. In short, a huge fan.

Ina new, six-page position paper on immigration reform, Mr Trump contends that "the Mexican government has taken the United States to the cleaners" by "exporting crime and poverty", which is alleged to have cost hundreds of billions in tax dollars, to have hurt Americans workers and to have precipitated a wave of murder and mayhem. Meanwhile, billions of American dollars pour into Mexico, sent home by unauthorised workers. Mexicans have made a mess in America, Mr Trump says, "and they must pay to clean it up". Until Mexico ponies up for a wall, Mr Trump proposes to impound remittance payments to Mexico and jack up fees on Mexicans passing legally into the country and on Mexican goods arriving at American ports. More serious trade barriers are not ruled out.

The plan, entitled "Immigration reform that will make America great again", is heavy on populist xenophobia, nationalism and protectionism and exceedingly light on intellectual credibility.

Mr Trump remains in the bad habit of telling lurid stories about immigrant crime, as though they are illustrative of an alarming trend. But as wepointed out in June, over the last thirty years America has experienced a boom in Mexican immigration together with a precipitous drop in violent crime. Mr Trump's rhetoric might lead you to think that the gutters of El Paso, Texas, a border city that teems with Mexican immigrants, must run with blood. Instead, El Paso's murder rate is among the lowest in the country for cities over half a million. Other cities rich with Mexicans, with and without papers, are similarly pacific. Mr Trump seems to be encouraging distress over a total non-problem in order to win respect for his courageous determination to take it on.

Mr Trump's white paper also misleads about the economic and fiscal effects of illegal Mexicans, inflating the costs while ignoring benefits. "The effects on jobseekers have been disastrous", Mr Trump claims. Yet laboureconomists routinely find that immigrants have done little or nothing to push down wagesor force native workers out of jobs.According to Gianmarco Ottaviano, Giovanni Peri and Greg Wright, economists at LSE and the University of California, firms do cut costs by hiring cheap immigrant labour. But this frees up money to expand production and hire more workers, usually American, to perform complementary, communication-intensive jobs requiring good English. Mexican immigrants actually help keep jobs in America by discouraging firms from "offshoring" in search of lower labour costs.

Mr Trump's fiscal accounting is similarly fishy. According to Mr Trump, "taxpayers have been asked to pick up hundreds of billions in healthcare costs, housing costs, education costs, welfare costs" for unauthorised immigrants. He neglects to mention that undocumented residents are already ineligible for most government benefits, but pay a lot in taxes.Studiestend to find that the typical immigrant in America pays more into the system than he or she takes out. The question is a little more complicated when it comes to less-educated, undocumented immigrants. A2006 study by the Texas State Comptrollerfound that unauthorised immigrants in 2005 paid $2.09 billion in state and local taxes, but consumed $2.60 billion in government services, mostly in education and healtha fiscal shortfall of $504m. However, the net economic effect of unauthorised workers was reckoned to be strongly positive. Without all those unauthorised workers, the Texas economy would have shrunk by 2.1%, or $17.7 billion, the state's comptroller said.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump proposes a boatload of new expenses, such as tripling the number Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, deporting all "criminal aliens", keeping all apprehended unauthorised immigrants in detention until they can be deported, and mounting major operations to round up and deport undocumented gang members. Then there's also that expensive wall. Mr Trump's ingenious plan for financing all this, when he has one, is to make the Mexicans pay for it.

Mr Trump promises to "make America great again", but fails to acknowledge the role Hispanic immigrants play in maintaining America's heft in the global economy. One way immigrants hone America's competitive edge is by helping to keep fertility rates above replacement level. This, in addition to a constant infusion of young new workers from over the border, ensures that America's workforce will continue to expand over the next several decades, even as the number of workers in China, Europe and Japan decline as their populations age. Why throw away this advantage? Americas worker-to-retiree ratios already threaten the long-term fiscal viability of Social Security and Medicare; why make this problem even worse?

"I have thousands of Mexican people working for me right now," Mr Trump boasted to Chuck Todd. He meant to suggest his affection for the Mexican people, but the comment instead proved that his immigration-reform plan is a bunch of malarkey. Suppose every one of Mr Trump's Mexican employees is entirely legal. If not for birthright citizenship, many of them wouldn't be. Is Mr Trump better off with those employees or not? If he preferred non-Mexican employees, he would have hired them instead. So why does he propose a smaller, slower-growing, less vital American economy in which it would be illegal to hire many of the people he deemed the best choice for his firm? What kind of business genius would do that? In Mr Trump's America, many businesses would be poorer. Texas would be poorer. Mexico would be poorer. America would be poorer. That's not quite a recipe for making a country great.

It's not surprising that Mr Trump's immigration-reform plan is so untethered from reality. It is part of a strategy, successful so far, of appealing to working-class white voters who are struggling to make ends meet and hungry for simple answers. The forces responsible for stagnant and sinking working-class wagesglobalisation, automation, "skill-biased technical change", not to mention the multifarious causes underlying anaemic rates of economic growthare barely within the ken of experts. To Americans caught in their current, they are impenetrable mysteries. A scapegoat offers an illusion of understanding, the comfort of blame, and false hope for a better life.

So Mr Trump has cast himself as the hero-in-waiting in a story about dunderheaded American leaders duped by a brilliantly nefarious Mexican plot. Americans trying but failing to get ahead need only to turn to Mr Trump, who will stick it to the Mexicans and set things right. This is a shameless, malignant form of politics. It's dangerous to Mexicans and cruel to those who are offered pandering lies instead of anything that might conceivably help. But as Mr Trumps poll numbers handily illustrate, peddling this junk works well enough. At this point it is anyones guess when Republican voters will finally call his bluff and seek policies that are rooted in reality, rather than in self-serving myths.

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Donald Trump on immigration reform: Blame Mexico! | The ...

Donald Trump’s Immigration Reform Plan: American Workers …

The paper is detailed to the level of specific areas of policy, and it also calls out one of his opponents, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), the author of the last Congress Gang of Eight amnesty billas being the personal senator of billionaire Mark Zuckerberg, because Rubio is doing Zuckerbergs bidding by pushing for an increase in H-1B visas to replace American workers in high-tech fields with cheaper foreign labor.

The paperwhich really constitutes a completely new look at immigration and a complete overhaul of the current system, politicians priorities, and special interest involvementstarts with three principles. Firstly, Trump argues, a nation without borders is not a nation.

As such, he writes, there must be a wall across the southern border.

Secondly, Trump argues, a nation without laws is not a nation.

Laws passed in accordance with our Constitutional system of government must be enforced, he writes as part of his second principle.

Thirdly, Trump argues, a nation that does not serve its own citizens is not a nation.

Any immigration plan must improve jobs, wages and security for all Americans, he writes to flesh out the third principle.

The paper, which was clearly influenced by Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL) who Trump consulted to help with immigration policy, contains three major parts: How a President Trump would handle border security, interior enforcement, and legal immigration policy as it relates to getting Americansat historically low workforce participation rates right nowback to work. Perhaps most importantly, Trump uses the term immigration reform to describe what he will dotaking that term away from those who use it to push for fundamental transformation of the United States with immigration policy.

When politicians talk about immigration reform they mean: amnesty, cheap labor and open borders, Trump writes. The Schumer-Rubio immigration bill was nothing more than a giveaway to the corporate patrons who run both parties. Real immigration reform puts the needs of working people first not wealthy globetrotting donors. We are the only country in the world whose immigration system puts the needs of other nations ahead of our own. That must change.

The plan details not just that Trump believes in putting American workers first over the interest of foreign workers, foreign nations, and special interests, but how he would do so. Trump is the first and only presidential candidate this cycle who has done this and gone into this level of policy detail.

Decades of disastrous trade deals and immigration policies havedestroyed our middle class, Trumps position paper reads. Today, nearly 40% of black teenagers are unemployed. Nearly 30% of Hispanic teenagers are unemployed. For black Americans without high school diplomas, the bottom has fallen out: more than 70% were employed in 1960, compared to less than 40% in 2000. Across the economy, the percentage of adults in the labor force has collapsed to a level not experienced in generations. As CBS news wrote in a pieceentitled Americas incredible shrinking middle class: If the middle-class is the economic backbone of America, then the country is developing osteoporosis.

Trump writes that the influx of foreign workers holds down salaries, keeps unemployment high, and makes it difficult for poor and working class Americans including immigrants themselves and their children to earn a middle class wage and that about half of all immigrants and their US-born children currentlylive in or near poverty, including more than 60 percent of Hispanic immigrants.

Every year, we voluntarily admit another 2 million new immigrants, guest workers, refugees, and dependents, growing our existing all-time historic record population of 42 million immigrants, Trump writes. We need to control the admission of new low-earning workers in order to: help wages grow, get teenagers back to work, aid minorities rise into the middle class, help schools and communities falling behind, and to ensure our immigrant members of the national family become part of the American dream. Additionally, we need to stop giving legal immigrant visas to people bent on causing us harm. From the 9/11 hijackers, to the Boston Bombers, and many others, our immigration system is being used to attack us. The President of the immigration caseworkers union declaredin a statement on ISIS: Weve become the visa clearinghouse for the world.

Trump calls for a halt to the issuance of new green cards until Americans are back to work.

Before any new green cards are issued to foreign workers abroad, there will be a pause where employers will have to hire from the domestic pool of unemployed immigrant and native workers, Trump wrote in a section of the paper called immigration moderation, an area where he cites U.S. Census Bureau data and information from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. This will help reverse womens plummetingworkplace participation rate, grow wages, and allow record immigration levels to subside tomore moderate historical averages.

He called for also increasing the prevailing wage when it comes to the issuance of H-1B visas so as to get Americansespecially Hispanics, blacks, and womenhired into corporate positions in Silicon Valley rather than foreigners. It is here where he points out that Rubiowho along with former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is one of the two candidates in the Republican primary against Trump that the donor class is pulling forhas put forward legislation that would drastically harm American workers job prospects, and hes done so on behalf of Zuckerberg and other donors.

We graduatetwo times more Americans with STEM degrees each year than find STEM jobs, yet as much as two-thirds of entry-level hiring for IT jobs is accomplished through the H-1B program, Trump wrote. More than half of H-1B visas are issued for the programs lowest allowable wage level, and more than eighty percent for its bottom two. Raising the prevailing wage paid to H-1Bs will force companies to give these coveted entry-level jobs to the existing domestic pool of unemployed native and immigrant, instead of flying in cheaper workers from overseas. This will improve the number of black, Hispanic and female workers in Silicon Valleywho have been passed over in favor of the H-1B program. Mark Zuckerbergs personal Senator, Marco Rubio, has a bill to triple H-1Bs that would decimate women and minorities.

Trump also laid out his belief that there should be a requirement that companies hire Americans before hiring foreigners from visa programs.

Too many visas,like the H-1B, have no such requirement, Trump wrote, citing testimony before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee and a Forbes magazine report about how incomes are falling in the U.S. because people are working less. In the year 2015, with 92 million Americans outside the workforce andincomes collapsing, we need to companies to hire from the domestic pool of unemployed. Petitions for workers should be mailed to the unemployment office, not USCIS.

Trump called for an end to the J-1 Visa programessentially a jobs program for foreign youthsand for it to be replaced with a jobs program for American youths in inner cities.

The J-1 visajobs program for foreign youth will be terminated and replaced with a resume bank for inner city youth provided to all corporate subscribers to the J-1 visa program, Trump wrote under a section header calling for a jobs program for inner city youth while citing a National Public Radio report on the J-1 visa program.

Trump calls to end welfare abuse, as well.

Applicants for entry to the United States should be required to certify that they can pay for their own housing, healthcare and other needs before coming to the U.S., he wrote.

He also pushes for the focus of refugee programs and asylum to shift to helping American children get more opportunities in life.

Increase standards for the admission of refugees and asylum-seekers tocrack down on abuses, he wrote, citing congressional testimony and two Breitbart News reports on welfare abuse by refugees in the U.S. and on crime among refugee communities. Use the monies saved onexpensive refugee programs to help place American children without parents in safer homes and communities, and to improve community safety inhigh crime neighborhoods in the United States.

Thats all just legal immigration policy. Trump said generally when it comes to enforcement that he thinks that America needs to defend her laws and the Constitution.

America will only be great as long as America remains a nation of laws that lives according to the Constitution, Trump wrote before setting up a list of specific policies he would implement if elected president to protect the United States from illegal immigration. No one is above the law. The following steps will return to the American people the safety of their laws, which politicians have stolen from them.

Trump details here many things, including that he believes there should be an end to birthright citizenship.

This remains the biggest magnet for illegal immigration, Trump wrote of birthright citizenship before citing Rasmussen Reports polling data showing Americans are opposed to it.By a 2:1 margin, voters say its the wrong policy, including Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) who said no sane country would give automatic citizenship to the children of illegal immigrants.

Trump thinks America needs to triple the number of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers working in the country. Trump said hed pay for it by cutting off tax credit payments currently handed out to illegal aliens.

As the President of the ICE Officers Council explained in Congressional testimony: Only approximately 5,000 officers and agents within ICE perform the lions share of ICEs immigration missionCompare that to the Los Angeles Police Department at approximately 10,000 officers. Approximately 5,000 officers in ICE cover 50 states, Puerto Rico and Guam, and are attempting to enforce immigration law against 11 million illegal aliens already in the interior of the United States. Since 9-11, the U.S. Border Patrol has tripled in size, while ICEs immigration enforcement arm, Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO), has remained at relatively the same size. This will be funded by accepting therecommendation of the Inspector General for Tax Administration and eliminating tax credit payments to illegal immigrants.

Trump also believes there should be nationwide E-verify and that such a simple measure will protect jobs for unemployed Americans.

Trump calls for a mandatory return of any criminal illegal aliens in the country to their home countries. The Obama Administration has released 76,000 aliens from its custody with criminal convictions since 2013 alone, Trump wrote. All criminal aliens must be returned to their home countries, a process which can be aided by canceling any visas to foreign countries which will not accept their own criminals, and making it a separate and additional crime to commit an offense while here illegally.

He also called for detention of illegal aliens caught crossing the border, not catch-and-release as has been done under President Obama.

Illegal aliens apprehended crossing the border must be detained until they are sent home, no more catch-and-release, Trump wrote.

Trump believes that America should defund sanctuary cities, too.

The government should, he wrote, cut-off federal grants to any city which refuses to cooperate with federal law enforcement.

There should also, he wrote, be enhanced penalties for overstaying a visa.

Millions of people come to the United States on temporary visas but refuse to leave, without consequence, Trump wrote. This is a threat to national security. Individuals who refuse to leave at the time their visa expires should be subject to criminal penalties; this will also help give local jurisdictions the power to hold visa overstays until federal authorities arrive. Completion of a visa tracking system required by law but blocked by lobbyists will be necessary as well.

In addition to that, Trump believes that the federal law enforcement should work alongside local law enforcements gang task forces to eliminate crime.

ICE officers should accompany local police departments conducting raids of violent street gangs likeMS-13 and the18th street gang, which have terrorized the country, Trump wrote citing news reports about the illegal alien gangs. All illegal aliens in gangs should be apprehended and deported. Again, quoting Chris Crane: ICE Officers and Agents are forced to apply the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) Directive, not to children in schools, but to adult inmates in jails. If an illegal-alien inmate simply claims eligibility, ICE is forced to release the alien back into the community. This includes serious criminals who have committed felonies, who have assaulted officers, and who prey on childrenICE officers should be required to place detainers on every illegal alien they encounter in jails and prisons, since these aliens not only violated immigration laws, but then went on to engage in activities that led to their arrest by police; ICE officers should be required to issue Notices to Appear to all illegal aliens with criminal convictions, DUI convictions, or a gang affiliation; ICE should be working with any state or local drug or gang task force that asks for such assistance.

In addition to all of that, Trump laid out how he would build a wall on the U.S. border with Mexico and how he would make Mexico pay for it.

For many years, Mexicos leaders have been taking advantage of the United States by using illegal immigration to export the crime and poverty in their own country (as well is in other Latin American countries), Trump wrote. They have evenpublished pamphlets on how to illegally immigrate to the United States. The costs for the United States have been extraordinary: U.S. taxpayers have been asked to pick up hundreds of billions in healthcare costs, housing costs, education costs, welfare costs, etc. Indeed, the annual cost of free tax credits alone paid to illegal immigrants quadrupled to $4.2 billion in 2011. The effects on jobseekers have also been disastrous, and black Americans havebeen particularly harmed.

He noted that the impact from crime by illegal aliens has been tragic, yet the government of Mexico profits off U.S. incompetence.

In recent weeks, the headlines have been covered with cases of criminals who crossed our border illegally only to go on to commit horrific crimes against Americans, Trump wrote. Most recently, an illegal immigrant from Mexico, with a long arrest record, is charged with breaking into a 64 year-old womens home, crushing her skull and eye sockets with a hammer, raping her, and murdering her. The Police Chief in Santa Maria says the blood trail leads straight to Washington. In 2011, the Government Accountability Office found that there were a shocking3 million arrests attached to the incarcerated alien population, including tens of thousands of violent beatings, rapes and murders. Meanwhile, Mexico continues to make billions on not only our bad trade deals but also relies heavily on the billions of dollars in remittances sent from illegal immigrants in the United States back to Mexico ($22 billion in2013alone).

That means, Trump wrote, that Mexicos government has taken the United States to the cleaners and that they are responsible for this problem, and they must help pay to clean it up.

The cost of building a permanent border wall pales mightily in comparison to what American taxpayers spend every single year on dealing with the fallout of illegal immigration on their communities, schools and unemployment offices, Trump wrote. Mexico must pay for the wall and, until they do, the United States will, among other things: impound all remittance payments derived from illegal wages; increase fees on all temporary visas issued to Mexican CEOs and diplomats (and if necessary cancel them); increase fees on all border crossing cards of which we issue about 1 million to Mexican nationals each year (a major source of visa overstays); increase fees on all NAFTA worker visas from Mexico (another major source of overstays); and increase fees at ports of entry to the United States from Mexico [Tariffs and foreign aid cuts are also options]. We will not be taken advantage of anymore.

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Donald Trump's Immigration Reform Plan: American Workers ...

Immigration Reform 2015: Increase Of Immigrants In US …

Immigration reform has emerged as a central issue in the 2016 presidential election asmore and more candidates includetheir stance on the issue as part of their political platform. Sowhat do Americans as a whole think of immigration?

Here's what Gallup has discovered.Only 25 percent of the country prefers an increase in immigration, more than double the 12 percent in a similar June 2002 study, anew Gallup studypublishedMondayrevealed. Some 34percent feel that fewer immigrants should begranted entrance to the country, according to about 40 percent of respondents to this year'ssurvey.

The results were part of Gallup's Minority Rights and Relations survey conducted from June 15 to July 10, which included greater representation of black and Hispanic citizens in the sample than in past years. Known as "over-sampling," the practice involves taking a "closer look at attitudes and opinions of minority groups whose representation in the sample of a standard poll might otherwise be too small for statistical analysis," according to the study. All 2,296 respondents were older than 18; all wereinterviewed by phone.

Through the lens of race, respondents' positions on immigration varied greatly. Hispanic respondents, half of whom reported being immigrants themselves,were most likely to prefer increased immigration at 36 percent. At the other end of the scale,non-Hispanic white citizensdisplayed the lowest support for more immigration, with only 21 percent. African-American voters fell between the two with 30 percent in favor of higher immigration rates.

However, all three groups reported their highestsupport for increasedimmigration rates since the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001, the study found.

U.S. Immigration Summary | InsideGov

The presidential candidates' stances on immigration reform this election season reflect the study's diversity in opinion. Immigration issuesdominated the GOP debate Thursday, and the candidates gave varying responses tohow they plan to address undocumented immigrants.

There should be a path for earned legal status for those who are here, former Florida Gov. JebBushsaid. Not amnesty --earned legal status.

Real estate mogul Donald Trump, who credits himself with starting the presidential candidates' campaign trail conversation about immigration reform, reiterated remarks he has made before about wanting to build a border between the country and Mexico.

We need to build a wall, and it has to be built quickly, Trump said. And I dont mind having a big beautiful door in that wall so that people can come into this country legally.

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Immigration Reform 2015: Increase Of Immigrants In US ...