FILIPINO IMMIGRANTS WORRY ABOUT U.S. PROPOSED LIMITS
When the U.S. government approved Ricardo Magpantay, his wife and young children to immigrate to America from the Philippines, it was 1991.
By the time a visa was available, it was 2005, and his children could not come with him because they were now adults.
More than a decade later, his children are still waiting.
Magpantay gets worried when he hears the White House is aiming to limit the relatives that immigrants-turned-citizens can sponsor, a profound change to a fundamental piece of the American immigration system.
“It is really frustrating and it is very dreadful for me, because after a long wait, if this will be passed, what will happen for them?” said Magpantay, a 68-year-old mechanical engineer in the Southern California city of Murrieta. “I won’t be able to bring them forever.”
For the past 50-plus years, family reunification has been central to U.S. immigration law.
Those who become naturalized citizens can bring spouses and minor children and petition for parents, adult children and siblings to get their own green cards and become Americans in their own right, with their own ability to sponsor.
Many on opposing sides of the immigration debate have long felt the family reunification system needs reform. Immigration advocates want a reassessment of the quotas on how many people can come from a given country in a given year, which has created decades-long backlogs for citizens of some countries.
Self- described “restrictionists,” including President Donald Trump, want a narrower, nuclear definition of family, making spouses and minor chil- dren the only relatives a citizen could sponsor.
That’s a central plank of the sweeping immigration overhaul Trump has proposed, a move that activists say could cut legal immigration in the U.S. by half.
Congress rejected competing bills last week meant to resolve the status of hundreds of thou- sands of young people brought to the U.S. illegally, including one plan that mirrored Trump’s overall immigration proposal.
The lack of resolution on an issue that was pivotal to Trump’s election leaves it as potential tinderbox for the midterm congressional elections this fall.
Jeff DeGuia, 28, recalled that it took his mother more than a decade to bring two sisters from the Philippines.
“There’s definitely this idea you are not really complete without your huge family,” said DeGuia, whose grandfather came to the United States for an engineering job in the 1970s.
His family settled in Chicago, though he and his brother now live in Southern California.
“Your cousins are like your brothers and sisters, and your uncles and aunts are like second dads and second moms,” he said.
Proposals to scale back the number of immigrants allowed into the country will end up dividing families and drive more people to enter the country illegally, making them vulnerable to exploitation, said Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles.
Family immigration is also important, advocates said, because it signals immigrants’ commitment to make America their home, not just take a job that lands them here.