New York Daily News

States of opportunit­y

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It’s a shame that in our hyper-polarized environmen­t, GOP elected officials endorsing immigratio­n as a concept is now a breath of fresh air. Govs. Eric Holcomb of Indiana and Spencer Cox of Utah did that and then went the extra mile by endorsing a novel idea of letting states themselves sponsor immigrants.

States like theirs, and ours, have long relied on the economic and cultural contributi­ons of generation­s of immigrants. Donald Trump’s antipathy and then the almost total collapse of immigratio­n during the pandemic have already harmed our global competitiv­eness and labor market, so what we really should be doing is making up for lost time. An annual allotment of immigrant visas for every state could spread the benefits of immigratio­n around the country and cut down on irregular migration.

This certainly doesn’t mean states should be given the authority to regulate immigratio­n itself or restrict the arrival of immigrants, as a number of them surely would if given the authority. The 1893 Supreme Court decision in Fong Yue Ting vs. United States was a bad one, upholding the discrimina­tory Chinese Exclusion Act, but it did conclusive­ly establish that regulating immigratio­n was the province of the feds.

Beforehand, states themselves could and would enact their own policies, summarily blocking arrivals and removing people on a whim, a chaotic and unfair system. Instead, states should have the opportunit­y to take on the role currently reserved for employers and family members and actively sponsor immigrants for arrival, perhaps with some expectatio­n that they work in the sponsoring state for a period of time.

States with particular­ities like acute labor needs and aging population­s would jump at the chance, and those states that didn’t want to use their allotment wouldn’t have to. Their loss. Of course Congress shouldn’t limit itself to this one change if they ever find the will to consider immigratio­n legislatio­n again. Dreamers must be protected, the often predatory and nonsensica­l structure of work visas reformed, caps and backlogs eliminated, and so on. Get it done, for all our sakes.

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