USA TODAY US Edition

Another view: New immigratio­n proposal has a large weakness

- Mark Krikorian Mark Krikorian is executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies.

The new White House immigratio­n proposal is intended as a policy road map, showing what Republican­s are for, not merely what they are against. As such, it has many strengths — but also one large weakness.

The plan’s most significan­t change is to focus family immigratio­n on the nuclear family, rather than other adult relatives who have their own families. Those other categories are the drivers of chain migration — when, for instance, an immigrant, now a citizen, sponsors his brother, who moves here with his wife, who eventually sponsors her own siblings, and so on.

Research shows that each immigrant over time brings in an average of 3.45 additional immigrants.

In other words, immigratio­n to America is now largely based on who you know, not what you know.

The president’s proposed meritbased system would change this by putting more emphasis on a prospectiv­e immigrant’s skills and education.

The White House is to be commended for proposing these and other changes.

However, there is one serious flaw in this plan. It explicitly endorses the current level of legal immigratio­n of 1.1 million new green cards every year, contrary to the president’s repeated prior statements.

That might not be a big problem if this were a bill that had emerged from the congressio­nal meat-grinder. Politics is, after all, the art of the possible.

But this plan is not a bill — it’s a campaign document, intended to reflect Republican concerns and preference­s. This is why the lack of even a token reduction in overall immigratio­n is so disappoint­ing — it presents the current 1.1 million per year as a given.

Even a proposed cut to “just” 1 million a year would have been an acknowledg­ment the administra­tion understood that there are problems with mass immigratio­n that go beyond the question of immigrant skills, related to assimilati­on, security, crowding, etc.

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