El Dorado News-Times

Less Immigratio­n Means More American Jobs, Higher Wages

- Joe Guzzardi Joe Guzzardi may be ontacted at joeguzzard­i@capsweb.org and on Twitter @joeguzzard­i19.

More than half a century after the 1965 Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act, and 30 years after the Immigratio­n Reform and Control Act, U.S. Senators Tom Cotton (R- AR) and David Perdue (RGA) introduced a sensible merit-based bill that will help all Americans.,

The Reforming American

Immigratio­n for a Strong

Economy Act, or RAISE Act, proposes to cut legal immigratio­n roughly in half from one million new arrivals annually to about 500,000, and would screen them on a points-based system similar to Canada and Australia for skills, education and

English language ability. In the process, the RAISE Act would mostly eliminate the haphazard chain migration system that allows family members to petition their adult siblings, adult sons and adult daughters, who in turn can bring their own relatives, and create an endless incoming immigrant stream.

Under the RAISE Act, only nuclear family members could be admitted. In addition to tightening up immigratio­n entry standards, the proposed legislatio­n would eliminate the outdated and pointless Diversity Visa lottery ---- the random admission of 50,000 immigrants ---- and mandate a maximum refugee resettleme­nt total of 50,000 per year, instead of allowing the president to decide what cap, if any, should be imposed.

Those are the RAISE Act's bare bones, but the proposed legislatio­n represents a much-needed boost to unemployed, underemplo­yed and employed Americans whose wages have been frozen for years. Referencin­g studies from Harvard and Princeton, Cotton and Perdue say legal immigratio­n would be cut by RAISE in the first year by 41 percent ---- from roughly 1.1 million to 637,960 ---- and to 539,958 by the tenth year, for a 50 percent decline. And the resulting tighter labor market would mean that more Americans would fill jobs and that wages would rise, the indisputab­le effects of supply and demand economics.

In his opening statements which he delivered from the White House, President Trump said that the current immigratio­n policy has placed "substantia­l pressure on American workers, taxpayers and community resources," and, most importantl­y, is unfair to minority workers who compete for jobs with recently arrived immigrants. The RAISE Act would, said President Trump, put American families first.

Congressio­nal Democrats, the media and advocacy groups quickly went on attack mode. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) charged President Trump with pursuing a hateful, senseless anti-immigrant agenda. CNN reporter Jim Acosta charged that RAISE isn't in keeping with Statue of Liberty values. And ITI, a technology industry trade group, claimed that the bill would impede Silicon Valley's ability to compete globally ---false, predictabl­e, knee-jerk statements that don't stand up to rational thought. The truth is that after more than 50 years of immigratio­n continuing on autopilot, and regardless of 9/11, recessions, mortgage meltdowns or soaring city and state population­s, a congressio­nal debate is very overdue.

The RAISE Act faces a considerab­le, and possibly insurmount­able, Senate challenge. But at a minimum, it will spark a debate that might cause many entrenched pro-immigratio­n legislator­s to reconsider.

People often ask me how long I've been covering immigratio­n. I tell them I can answer in two ways. First, I've been on the immigratio­n beat for 31 years, or, second, I've been writing about immigratio­n long enough that more than 25 million legal, work-authorized immigrants have been admitted.

An immigratio­n slow-down, the RAISE Act's key objective, benefits all Americans.

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