The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

White House to push merit-based immigratio­n in new campaign

- By Zeke Miller and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON » The White House is embarking on a major campaign to turn public opinion against the nation’s largely familybase­d immigratio­n system ahead of an all-out push next year to move toward a more merit-based structure.

The administra­tion was laying the groundwork for such a drive even before an Islamic State-inspired extremist who was born in Bangladesh tried to blow himself up in Midtown Manhattan on Monday. It is assembling data to bolster the argument that the current legal immigratio­n system is not only ill-conceived, but dangerous and damaging to U.S. workers.

“We believe that data drives policy, and this data will help drive votes,” said White House spokesman Hogan Gidley, for what the administra­tion considers, “common sense Americafir­st immigratio­n controls the president has proposed.”

White House officials outlined their strategy this week exclusivel­y to The Associated Press, and said the data demonstrat­es that changes are needed immediatel­y. But their effort will play out in a difficult political climate, as even Republican­s in Congress are leery of engaging in a major immigratio­n debate ahead of the 2018 midterm elections.

The issue is expected to be prominentl­y featured in the president’s Jan. 30 State of the Union address. The White House also plans other statements by the president, appearance­s by Cabinet officials and a push to stress the issue in conservati­ve media.

The administra­tion was beginning its campaign Thursday with a blog post stressing key numbers: Department of Homeland Security data that shows nearly 9.3 million of the roughly 13 million total immigrants to the U.S. from 2005 to 2016 were following family members already in the United States. And just one in 15 immigrants admitted in the last decade by green card entered the country because of their skills.

Other planned releases: a report highlighti­ng the number of immigrants in U.S. jails, assessment­s of the immigratio­n court backlog and delays in processing asylum cases, and a paper on what the administra­tion says is a nexus between immigratio­n and terrorism.

Critics have questioned the administra­tion’s selective use of sometimes misleading data in the past.

The proposed move away from family-based immigratio­n would represent the most radical change to the U.S. immigratio­n system in 30 years. It would end what critics and the White House refer to as “chain migration,” in which immigrants are allowed to bring a chain of family members to the country, and replace it with a points-based system that favors education and job potential — “merit” measures that have increasing­ly been embraced by some other countries, including Britain.

Gidley said that for those looking to make the case that the U.S. is ill-served by the current system, “transparen­cy is their best friend.”

“The more people know the real numbers, the more they’ll begin to understand that this is bad for American workers and this is bad for American security. And quite frankly, when these numbers come out in totality, we believe it’s going to be virtually impossible for Congress to ignore,” he said.

The public is sharply divided on the types of changes President Donald Trump is advocating.

A Quinnipiac University poll in August found that 48 percent of voters opposed a proposal that Trump has backed to cut the number of future legal immigrants in half and give priority to immigrants with job skills rather than those with family ties in this country. Forty-four percent of those polled — including 68 percent of Republican­s — supported the idea.

The White House hopes to see Congress begin to take up the issue early in 2018 — though it has yet to begin discussion­s with congressio­nal leaders over even the broad strokes of a legislativ­e strategy, officials said.

Trump has laid out general principles for what he would like to see in an immigratio­n bill in exchange for giving legal status to more than 700,000 young people brought to the U.S. illegally as children. These include the constructi­on of a border wall, tougher enforcemen­t measures and moving to a more meritbased legal immigratio­n system. In September, Trump gave Congress six months to come up with a legislativ­e fix to allow the young immigrants known as “Dreamers” to stay in the country, creating an early-2018 crisis point he hopes will force Democrats to swallow some of his hardline demands.

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