Trump supported immigration legislation spurs outcry
Yaritza Mendez is an American citizen thanks to an immigration system that has been built around family connections for more than 50 years. Since 1965, immigrants turned-American citizens can serve as sponsors to their parents, children and siblings and help them become legal residents and then U.S. citizens. It’s a system that allowed Mendez’s grandmother to bring her son to the U.S. from the Dominican Republic about a decade ago, which in turn allowed him to sponsor her.
The family-based immigration system would be completely upended by proposed legislation that got an endorsement from President Donald Trump on Wednesday. The proposal would drastically reduce who’s eligible for family visas and cut overall immigration by 50 per cent within 10 years, giving a preference to English speakers, educated immigrants, high-wage earners and others. The bill from Republican Sens. David Perdue of Georgia and Tom Cotton of Arkansas has little chance of getting anywhere, with Democrats dismissing it and even fellow GOP legislators showing little interest in any kind of immigration action. Opponents are decrying it as an attack on immigrants and on legal immigration itself, one that has echoes throughout American history.
“I do contribute to this country as much as a born American,’’ said Mendez, who works as an organizer at Make the Road New York, an immigrant advocacy organization. “I do pay my taxes on time. I work and I go out and vote. I should have, and do deserve, the right to be with my mom.’’
The current system was enacted by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965. Before that, the U.S. had quotas that allowed a set number of people from certain countries, like those in Europe, to come but essentially barred people from other parts of the world.
The change was backed by the American families of European immigrants who wanted to bring over their relatives.