Daily Caller
By Rachel Stoltzfoos
March 26, 2016
The
United States issues about a million green cards to legal immigrants
every year, granting them permanent legal residence and the ability to
compete for American jobs, and welcomes about
700,000 guest workers. The Census Bureau estimates nearly one in five
U.S. residents will be foreign-born by 2060 — the largest share of total
population ever recorded in American history.
Here’s
what the Republican and Democratic presidential contenders would do
with that exploding population and the guest worker programs businesses
use to import foreign workers.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — Democratic candidate
Clinton
wants to make it easier for legal and illegal immigrants to become
citizens and to access government healthcare, and thinks the legal
immigration system should focus on promoting
family unity rather than admitting immigrants of a certain skill-level.
She’s supported both high-skilled and low-skilled temporary visa
programs that allow businesses to import foreign workers.
“American
needs comprehensive immigration reform with a pathway to citizenship,”
she says in a header on the immigration platform she lays out on her
website.
As
senator, she supported a 2007 comprehensive immigration bill that would
have allowed legal immigrants to bring in family members quickly and
without limit, and she pushed an amendment
to the bill that would give legal immigrants immediate access to
government health insurance.
She
has also supported the H-1B visa program, which companies like Disney
have used to displace American workers, even as businesses say they need
the foreign workers because of a shortage
of American workers. And the 2007 bill would have created a new
temporary work visa for low-skilled workers aimed at allowing businesses
to hire legal and illegal immigrants and give them a path to
citizenship.
Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders — Democratic candidate
Sanders’
legal immigration platform is similar to Hillary Clinton’s, but with a
populist twist. He too supports a family-based rather than merit-based
system that makes it easier for legal
immigrants to bring in family members who are also eligible to work and
apply for legal permanent residence. And he also wants all immigrants
to have immediate access to government healthcare and an easier path to citizenship.
“Our
immigration policy will put the sanctity of families at the forefront
and will be grounded in civil, human, and labor rights,” Sanders says on
his website.
But
he differs from Hillary on guest worker visas, actively against or
skeptical of the programs he believes exploit immigrant workers and
undercut American jobs and wages. Rather than allow
businesses to hire low or high skilled workers temporarily on a guest
visa that often puts the immigrant at the mercy of the employer, Sanders
advocates for giving the immigrants more legal rights and opportunity.
He’d also force businesses to pay more, not
less, if they want to import foreign workers to deal with a labor
shortage.
Businessman Donald Trump — Republican candidate
Trump
has taken the hardest stance on both legal and illegal immigration of
the candidates, although he’s flip-flopped in debates and in interviews
regarding some of his positions. His plan
focuses on the needs of American workers, rather than high-skilled
immigration or family reunification, in line with the proposals of
Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions, an immigration hardliner.
The
U.S. currently issues about one million green cards each year, and
about 700,000 guest worker permits, something Trump’s platform says
“holds down salaries, keeps unemployment high, and
makes it difficult for poor and working class Americans … to earn a
middle class wage.”
Trump
would put the green card program on hold temporarily, barring any new
immigrants from obtaining green cards, and effectively dismantle the
H-1B visa program by raising the minimum wage
businesses must pay H-1B guest workers and requiring them to hire
American workers first when possible.
Trump
would also put a temporary ban on all Muslim immigrants to the United
States, as part of his plan to “stop giving legal immigrant visas to
people bent on causing us harm.”
Republican Sen. Ted Cruz — Republican candidate
Cruz
has campaigned consistently on denying “amnesty” to illegal immigrants,
and his online platform focuses almost solely on securing the border
and dealing with illegal immigrants. But
in his in-depth plan he advocates for an expanded legal immigration
system based on merit rather than family ties.
Cruz
was highly critical of the 2013 comprehensive immigration package
dubbed the “Gang of Eight,” in terms of how it addressed illegal
immigration. But he offered amendments to build significantly
on the bill’s expansion of the legal immigration system, such as a
massive increase of H-1B visas. He has referred to himself as the
Senate’s biggest advocate for legal immigration.
Since
then, however, he has revised his position on legal immigration and the
H-1B visa program, stating now in his plan that immigration levels
should not be expanded until the historic
low of American workforce participation improves. He would also suspend
the H-1B program for 180 days to address “abuses” of the program, and
add reforms such as a requirement for companies to produce sworn
affidavits describing their efforts to hire American
workers first.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich — Republican candidate
Kasich’s
position on legal immigration is more akin to Hillary and Bernie than
the other Republicans in the race, in that he emphasized welcoming
immigrants and focusing on uniting families.
He prides himself on what he calls a pragmatic approach to implementing
immigration policies, and casts himself as the “humane” alternative on
immigration to candidates like Trump and Cruz.
His
campaign website does not list immigration among his top issues, opting
to highlight issues such as “electability” and “defending the Second
Amendment.”
He’s
signaled support, however, for both low and high skilled guest worker
visa programs, and voted to dramatically increase the size of the H-1B visa program when he represented Ohio in
the House. “Our program is too narrow now,” Kasich said in a Fox News
primary debate, referring to the guest worker programs that allow about
700,000 workers into the country each year.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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