Texarkana Gazette

Executive orders aim to reduce number of immigrants in U.S.

- By Brian Bennett

WASHINGTON—Behind Presi- dent Donald Trump’s efforts to step up deportatio­ns and block travel from seven mostly Muslim countries lies a goal that reaches far beyond any immediate terrorism threat: a desire to reshape American demographi­cs for the long term and keep out people who Trump and senior aides believe will not assimilate.

In pursuit of that goal, Trump in his first weeks in office has launched the most dramatic effort in decades to reduce the country’s foreign-born population and set in motion what could become a generation­al shift in the ethnic makeup of the U.S.

Trump and top aides have become increasing­ly public about their underlying pursuit, pointing to Europe as an example of what they believe is a dangerous path Western nations have taken. Trump believes European government­s have foolishly allowed Muslims with extreme views to settle in their countries, sowing seeds for unrest and recruitmen­t by terrorist groups.

“Take a look at what’s happening in Sweden. Take a look at what’s happening in Germany. Take a look at what’s happened in France. Take a look at Nice and Paris,” Trump said Friday during a speech to the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, referring to riots last week in a predominan­tly Muslim neighborho­od in Stockholm, as well as attacks and unrest in similar neighborho­ods in Germany and France over the last few years.

Trump is likely to issue a new travel ban this week, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Monday.

Critics of Trump’s travel ban, including several federal judges who have blocked it, have pointed to a lack of evidence that immigrants from the seven countries have engaged in terrorist acts in the U.S. Trump’s aides see a lack of trouble so far in the U.S. as having little relevance.

Two days after Trump imposed the ban, a senior administra­tion official told reporters at the White House that the order was part of a larger strategy to develop an immigratio­n system that selects immigrants the White House believes will make “positive contributi­ons” to the country.

“We don’t want a situation where, 20 to 30 years from now, it’s just like a given thing that on a fairly regular basis there is domestic terror strikes, stores are shut up or that airports have explosive devices planted, or people are mowed down in the street by cars and automobile­s and things of that nature,” the official said.

President Barack Obama and his aides also sometimes contrasted the relative lack of terrorism in the U.S. experience with the higher level of violence in Europe. But they attributed the difference to America having done a better job than European countries of assimilati­ng foreign-born residents.

Trump and his aides do not accept that. In their eyes, the U.S. has been spared mostly because its Muslim population remains much smaller than that of France, Germany or other European nations. Muslims make up about 7.5 percent of the French population, but only about 1 percent in the U.S., according to estimates by the nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center.

“Foreign terrorists will not be able to strike America if they cannot get into our country,” Trump said Friday. “Take a look at what’s happening to our world, folks. And we have to be smart. We have to be smart. We can’t let it happen to us,” he said.

But U.S. demographi­cs have been changing rapidly—and undesirabl­y in the eyes of top Trump aides, including his chief strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, and domestic policy adviser Stephen Miller.

Inside the West Wing, the two men have pushed an ominous view of refugee and immigratio­n flows, telling other policymake­rs that if large numbers of Muslims are allowed to enter the U.S., parts of American cities will begin to replicate marginaliz­ed immigrant neighborho­ods in France, Germany and Belgium that have been home to plotters of terrorist attacks in recent years, according to a White House aide familiar with the discussion­s.

They point to shifts in immigratio­n in the U.S. over the last century to make their case.

In 1960, 84 percent of migrants to the U.S. came from Europe or Canada, a bubble that was largely a result of the Immigratio­n Act of 1924, which restricted the migration of Italians and Eastern European Jews and essentiall­y banned the immigratio­n of Arabs and Asians.

Once the U.S. immigratio­n system was revamped in 1960s to be more open to people from around the world, Europeans declined sharply as a share of those migrating to the U.S. By 2014, the most recent year figures are available, that share had dropped to 13.6 percent.

Immigrants from Asia made up the largest share with 26.4 percent.

That’s a trend Trump criticized long before he began linking it to the risk of terrorism.

“I say to myself, why aren’t we letting people in from Europe?” he asked during a speech at CPAC four years ago. “Nobody wants to say it, but I have many friends from Europe. They want to come in. People I know. Tremendous people. Hardworkin­g people. They can’t come in,” he said, without elaboratin­g.

But his argument ignores other big changes in society, critics note.

“If you were going to say, ‘We don’t like that equalizati­on we did in 1965, we need to go back,’ that is going back to a time when the United States was more overtly racist,” said Tanya Golash-Boza, a sociology professor at the University of California, Merced who studies immigratio­n and race.

At the same time that the European share of migration has dropped, the overall foreign-born share of the U.S. population has increased, quadruplin­g in the five decades since the 1965 Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act took effect.

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