Antelope Valley Press

Where’s the big immigratio­n debate that we need?

- Rich Lowry Commentary Rich Lowry is the editor-in-chief of National Review.

Do you remember the big national debate on whether the United States would adopt a policy to make the foreign share of the population the highest it’s ever been?

Neither do I. For the simple reason, of course, that there wasn’t one.

That doesn’t mean that the policy wasn’t adopted, through inertia and the Biden administra­tion’s imposition of a de facto open border for a large swath of asylum-seekers.

An analysis of Census data by Steve Camarota and his colleagues at the Center for Immigratio­n Studies has found that a 4.5 million net increase in immigrants since Joe Biden took office has boosted the share of the foreign born to 15%, the highest ever recorded.

You know all the blackand-white photos of immigrants coming to Ellis Island, the lore about names being changed upon arrival, “your huddled masses yearning to be free”?

We are currently higher than that. We’re eclipsing the Great Wave of Immigratio­n with an even greater wave. We hit 14.8 in 1890 and 14.7 in 1910, in what were, until now, the most historic decades for immigratio­n.

Just last month, the Census Bureau was projecting the foreign-born share of the population wouldn’t hit 15% until in 2033. Now, we could keep going up from here. “If the immigrant population continues to grow,” Camarota writes, “it will set new numerical and percentage records every year going forward.”

A straight-line projection shows the share of foreign-born increasing to 15.5 by the end of Biden’s term, and to an astonishin­g 17.3% by the end of a potential second term.

This is not the normal course of business. According to Camarota, the foreign-born population has grown on average by 137,000 a month since the beginning of Biden’s term, higher than Donald Trump’s pre-COVID 42,000 and Barack Obama’s 68,000.

What accounts for this? Some of it is a COVID bounce-back in legal immigratio­n. But that’s not responsibl­e for the lion’s share of the story. The Biden administra­tion has boosted the foreign-born share of the population well above the pre-COVID trend line.

It has done it by ignoring the law and greasing the skids for new arrivals even if they have no right to be here. Of the total net 4.5 million increase of immigrants on Biden’s watch, 2.5 million of that is illegal immigrants. Most of that illegal number is solely a function of discretion and the administra­tion’s opposition to excluding bogus asylum-seekers.

The Biden administra­tion’s border policy has obviously been the subject of debate, including criticism from his own party. The overall number of immigrants, though, is rarely mentioned, and even treated as an almost illegitima­te topic for public considerat­ion.

This makes no sense. The foreign-born share of the population has consequenc­es for schooling, welfare, wages, politics and the broader culture. It is at least as important, if not more so, than trade policy, Ukraine aid, the deficit, infrastruc­ture or a whole host of other issues that are routine fodder for congressio­nal debate and the Sunday shows.

It also should be subject to the approval of the American people and its representa­tives just like those other issues. We should affirmativ­ely decide whether we want the foreign share of the population to be 15% and growing, or less than 15% and shrinking, and the mix of people who are coming — largely unskilled, or overwhelmi­ngly higher skilled?

Instead, we treat immigratio­n as something that happens to us, like the weather. (Although progressiv­es now seek to influence the weather, so maybe this is a dated analogy.) It isn’t. We are making the choices that have gotten us to this point.

The fact is that immigratio­n has operated largely under its own power, and under false pretenses, since the immigratio­n reform of 1965. One reason there’s so little discussion of the underlying issue is that many people simply don’t know the historic numbers involved.

In short, there’s been no debate on 15%, and one, shamefully, doesn’t seem in the offing.

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