Politifact
By Lauren Carroll
January 31, 2016
Throughout
his Republican presidential campaign, Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida has
tried to distance himself from his involvement in a 2013 failed
bipartisan immigration
bill.
The
legislation has proven to be a liability for Rubio because it contained
a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants, and some of Rubio’s
opponents say his support
for the bill is evidence that he’s not tough on immigration. On NBC’s
Meet the Press Jan. 31, host Chuck Todd asked Rubio if he regretted
being part of the Gang of Eight senators who authored the bill.
"Look,
I tried to fix the problem," Rubio said, referring to illegal
immigration. "This is a real problem. And where are we today? We are
worse off today than we were
five years ago. We have more illegal immigrants here. We have two
unconstitutional executive orders on amnesty. I went to Washington to
fix a problem."
Our
ears perked up when Rubio said there are more illegal immigrants in the
United States than there were five years ago, so we decided to check
the numbers. We found
that the latest available data doesn’t support Rubio’s statement.
A
July 2015 headline from the Pew Research Center directly counters Rubio
that there are more illegal immigrants than five years ago:
"Unauthorized immigrant population
stable for half a decade."
Pew
found that the number of illegal immigrants living in the United States
has seen very little fluctuation, between 2010 and 2014, the latest
five-year period of data
available — going from 11.4 million in 2010 to 11.3 million in 2014.
The illegal immigrant population peaked at 12.2 million in 2007. (See
the chart created by Pew to the left.)
The
Pew analysis concluded that the illegal immigrant population has been
stable the past few years because the number of new immigrants is about
equal to the number of
those living in the United States who are deported, leave on their own,
or die.
Pew
also found that the number of illegal immigrants from Mexico, in
particular, has been on the decline — going from a peak of 6.9 million
in 2007 to 5.6 million in 2014.
The
decline in Mexican immigrants is the primary reason why illegal
immigration stopped growing, said Robert Warren, a demographer and
senior visiting fellow at the Center
for Migration Studies. He pointed us to his own recent research on the
subject.
The
report’s executive summary says illegal immigration is a hot political
topic, in part, because people believe it’s on the rise. However, the
paper finds that "this
belief is mistaken and that, in fact, the undocumented population has
been decreasing for more than a half a decade."
Warren’s
report found that the illegal immigrant population has declined every
year for the past five years of available data, landing at about 10.9
million illegal immigrants
in 2014, down from 11.7 million in 2010.
Why the decline in Mexican immigration?
In
a prior fact-check, we found that demographic change is possibly the
biggest driver. The birth rate in Mexico has fallen steadily since at
least 1990. Marc Rosenblum
at the Migration Policy Institute said that translates into fewer
people coming into the workforce.
He
said apprehensions at the border strongly suggest that fewer people are
trying to sneak into the country. Data from the U.S. Border Patrol show
a drop in total apprehensions
of about 40 percent since 2009. It used to be border agents stopped
around a million people coming in from Mexico per year. Last year, it
was about 188,000.
More surveillance, stiffer penalties and more barriers at the border have had the intended effect, he said.
Other
drivers include the hit on the construction industry during the
recession. That was a sector that drew many immigrants, and while it has
recovered a bit, it is not
nearly as robust as it once was. Plus, according to one survey,
Mexicans who return to their native country generally find that they
make more money than when they left.
Our ruling
Rubio said, "We have more illegal immigrants here" than we did five years ago.
Multiple
estimates show that the illegal immigrant population has stabilized, or
even decreased, from its peak in 2007 through 2014, the latest
available data. According
to Pew, the illegal immigrant population was 11.3 million in 2014, down
from 11.4 million five years prior in 2010. This is in sharp contrast
to dramatic and steady increases throughout the 1990s and early 2000s.
There
is no evidence to support the idea that the illegal immigrant
population has grown in the past five years. We rate Rubio’s claim
False.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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