The Star Malaysia

Trump calls for radical reform

President: System to favour skilled, English-speaking immigrants

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump called for radical immigratio­n reform to favour skilled, English-speaking workers over the poorly educated and to shut the door on “frivolous” asylum claimants.

The reforms, announced in a Rose Garden speech, would be the first major change to the system in decades and would fundamenta­lly pivot away from the US tradition of welcoming “your poor, your huddled masses”, as the poem inscribed on the Statue of Liberty puts it.

However, there was little chance that the business-minded Republican president’s ideas will get anywhere in Congress, where immigratio­n is seen as a politicall­y toxic subject, particular­ly ahead of 2020 legislativ­e and presidenti­al elections.

For Trump, who has made building security walls on the Mexican border a keystone of his first term, the proposals will feed straight into his re-election campaign.

He said the plan would make US immigratio­n “the envy of the modern world” by attracting the highly qualified, in line with what he said were the more competitiv­e policies used by Australia and Canada.

“We cherish the open door that we want to create for our country. But a big proportion of those immigrants must come in through merit and skill,” he said.

“The biggest change we make is to increase the proportion of highly skilled immigratio­n from 12% to 57%, and we’d like to even see if we can go higher,” Trump said.

Under the proposed reforms, immigrants will also be “required to learn English and to pass a civics exam prior to admission”, Trump said.

The US president also took aim at what he said were abuses of the country’s asylum system, which is struggling to cope with large numbers of Central Americans who say they are fleeing gang violence in some of the world’s most lethal countries.

“Our nation has a proud history of affording protection to those fleeing government persecutio­ns,” Trump said.

“Unfortunat­ely, legitimate asylum seekers are being displaced by those lodging frivolous claims.”

Trump’s ideas are so unlikely to get a vote in Congress that analysts see his policy splash as more of a campaign speech than a serious bid to get legislatio­n enacted.

For politician­s on the right, Trump’s plan fails because it does not seek to diminish overall immigratio­n numbers. On the left, it is dead on arrival because it ignores a drive to give legal status to people brought into the country illegally as young children, known as “Dreamers.”

Cornell University Law School professor Stephen Yale-Loehr, an immigratio­n expert, said Trump’s proposal “has some ideas worth considerin­g,” but is so incomplete in addressing the broader complicati­ons in the system that Congress will not take it seriously. — AFP

 ??  ?? Major change: Trump said the plan would make US immigratio­n ‘the envy of the modern world’ by attracting the highly qualified. — AP
Major change: Trump said the plan would make US immigratio­n ‘the envy of the modern world’ by attracting the highly qualified. — AP

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