Chain migration is not anywhere close to the level that Trump makes it out to be. Nor is it so easy. Most importantly,
Family migration is sometimes referred to as “chain migration” by opponents who want to cast it in a threatening light. This is a misleading, inaccurate, and derogatory term used by Donald Trump and other anti-immigrant extremists to slander immigrants who want to reunite with their families.
This is yet another manifestation of hyperbole and racist fear-mongering. Another consideration is that liberal family-friendly policies attract immigrants with great talent and stellar qualifications.
Read on.
-Angela
by Anna Núñez on January 17, 2018
Tags: AVEF, Family
Unity, Highlights, Immigration
101
The family
migration program has been around since the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 and
allows U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents to bring in their immediate
relatives to the U.S. This law did away with the racially discriminatory
national origins quota system from the 1920s.
Through
the U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), U.S. permanent
residents (or “green card” holders) can sponsor their spouses and unmarried children for permanent
residence. U.S. citizens can petition
for residence for their parents, siblings, and married adult children.
There are 480,000 family migration visas available every year.
Donald
Trump wants to restrict family migration, but it’s already hard enough: at the
current rate of visa distribution, families are forced to wait years or decades
before being able to reunite with family members.
View here. |
Donald Trump and family migration
Family
migration is sometimes referred to as “chain migration” by opponents who want
to cast it in a threatening light. This is a misleading, inaccurate, and derogatory term used by Donald Trump and
other anti-immigrant extremists to slander immigrants who want to reunite with
their families.
Trump has
called family migration an instrument for terrorism, which is completely false. He and other right-wing
Republicans have also referred to family migration as a backdoor method for legalizing the
undocumented, which is also false. For example, a U.S. citizen who marries a
Mexican national who entered without inspection likely would not be able to
sponsor him through family migration channels, because those who enter
the U.S. without documents are required to return to their home countries
and wait 10 years before they can obtain a visa.
Furthermore,
because there are only a certain number of family migration visas available
every year, the waiting process to obtain one can be very long. According to
the New York Times, more than 3.9 million people from
around the world are currently waiting in line for immigrant visas, and many
have been waiting for decades.
Donald
Trump said he wants to replace the current
family migration policy with a so-called merit-based system. The idea is
to have potential immigrants judged on a point scale, with points doled out for
education, existing knowledge of the English language, a firm job offer, and
other criteria. Put simply, “merit-based immigration” in Trump-speak is
code for “English-speaking, educated, affluent, and white.”
The goal
of this policy is twofold. Not only do proponents hope to slow-down the
“browning” of America, but they also want to reduce the overall number of immigrants coming
to the U.S. This is in line with the far-right immigration playbook and
immigration restrictionists’ long-time goals of decreasing legal as well as
undocumented immigration.
Trump currently backs the RAISE Act, a bill
sponsored by Sens. Tom Cotton (R-AR) and David
Perdue (R-GA) which would limit visa sponsorship to spouses and minor
children of U.S. citizens while implementing a point-based merit system to
prioritize skilled workers. The number of family migration visas
would be cut in half, and immigrant family reunifications would be made much
more difficult.
Trump’s
opposition to family migration is interesting, considering how much his own
family has benefitted from the policy he is attempting to modify. His
Scottish-born mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, and grandfather, Friedrich Trump, followed their siblings to America.
Trump’s German-born grandmother, Elizabeth Christ, also arrived in America using
family ties. And, Trump’s own foreign-born wife, Melania, helped her Slovenia-born parents live
in the United States. As Columbia University historian Mae
M. Ngai noted, “Donald Trump is a product of ‘chain migration.’”
The economics of family migration
“The
contributions of family-based immigrants to the U.S. economy, local
communities, and the national fabric are manifold. They account for a
significant portion of domestic economic growth, contribute to the
well-being of the current and future labor force, play a key role
in business development and community improvement, and are among the most
upwardly mobile segments of the labor force”, reports the American Immigration Council.
According
to the Council, relatives sponsored through family migration help their family
members with child care and provide other household assistance, facilitating
greater workforce participation for those who hired them. Their family members
provide them with resources and information not provided to other new
immigrants, allowing them to quickly adjust to American life. And they often
have high employment rates and high earnings growth, allowing them to
contribute to the U.S. economy and their communities.
A prime
example of the successful achievement of the “American Dream” by an immigrant
entrepreneur is John Tu (ranked No. 87 on the Forbes
400 list) who came to the US via family migration. Tu
successfully created billions in wealth with his company Kingston
Technology, and – in a rare move generating worldwide attention –
after selling his company, distributed $100 million in profits in bonuses to his
American employees. Ranging from $100,000 to $300,000, Tu’s
generosity proved life-changing for funding the “American Dreams” of his
employees and their children.
Trump’s
move to create a less family-friendly admissions policy would have serious
negative implications to our nation’s economy, as noted by economist Harriet Duleep:
Family
visas are…an important complement to high-skilled visas; skilled immigrants
have families too. In considering which country to move to, will an emigrating
scientist be more likely to move to a country where his family members,
including siblings, parents, and adult children, can also live, or to a country
where only certain family members are welcome? Would Einstein have continued to
live in the U.S. had he not been able to bring over his sister Maja? A
family-friendly policy may be one reason the U.S. has been able to attract
immigrants with stellar qualifications.
The emotional benefits of family migration
Of
course, family-friendly policies are also important to Americans and to the
U.S. independent of economic benefits. As Jen Smyers of Church World
Service recently said:
Being
able to see your family members, hold your children, and live with your family
are the most basic of family values. That is what is being attacked by
proposals that would redefine family under U.S. immigration law and keep U.S.
citizens and lawful permanent residents from sponsoring their parents,
siblings, and even children….To redefine family and prevent family
reunification would not only devastate individuals’ lives, it would turn our
backs as a nation to our collective future and invalidate our claim to
prioritize family values.
Policy
experts have repeatedly defended family migration. The White
House’s rhetoric about ending “chain migration” in exchange for a possible DACA
deal “is reminiscent of what brought about shameful moments in
history like the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1992 or Japanese incarceration during
World War II,” said John C. Yang, President and Executive Director
of Asian
Americans Advancing Justice (AAJC). He further stated the
proposed immigration cuts “are completely counter to what our nation values the
most – family, which is the cornerstone of the community. Lawmakers who purport
to be for family values should value families.”
AAJC
recently spearheaded a sign-on letter in Support of Family Immigration, Diversity
Visas, and Refugees, in which it reminded congressional leaders that
the currently family migration system established by the INA of 1965 was
created to end previous racist national origin quotas heavily favoring Northern
and Western Europe. Yang also expressed concern that a “merit based system”
will reduce the parity of women in the workplace by prioritizing the
“immigration of men over women due to gender discrimination in other countries
where women do not have equal opportunities.”
In short,
our current system of family migration is beneficial to the U.S. economically
as well as emotionally. Americans value united families, and Congress should
honor that by ignoring Trump’s rhetoric and protecting family migration
policies.
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