Lodi News-Sentinel

Report: Fewer immigrants without status since 2009

- By Amy Taxin

SANTA ANA — The number of immigrants in the U.S. illegally fell to 11 million since 2009, largely because of a dropoff in the number of Mexicans without legal status, according to a study released Tuesday.

The report by the nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center — using survey data from 2015 — showed the number of immigrants lacking legal status was 11.3 million in 2009. The number of Mexicans in the country illegally dropped to about 5.6 million from 6.4 million during the same six-year period.

“The numbers are not going up, and in fact, the numbers for Mexicans have been going down for almost a decade now,” said Jeffrey Passel, senior demographe­r at Pew Research Center in Washington, D.C. “And that is counter to a lot of the rhetoric you hear.”

Pew didn’t give a reason for the decline. But in other earlier reports it said the U.S. economy was slow to recover from the recession and border enforcemen­t got stricter.

The report is based on data taken by the U.S. Census Bureau during the latter years of the Obama presidency. But it comes amid the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to deport immigrants in the country illegally and build a wall on the U.S.Mexico border.

Pew did not provide a forecast for this population since Trump took office.

The report shows illegal immigratio­n climbed during the 1990s and into the 2000s and peaked before the recession. Since then, the number of Mexicans in the country illegally has fallen while the number of Asian and Central American immigrants has grown.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States