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First Things on Immigration
What any administration and Congress should be focused on

By Andrew R. Arthur
Whatever the final outcome of Tuesday's elections, they give me a chance to reflect on the first things that any administration and any Congress should focus on when they debate immigration (as they inevitably will). The first (first) thing is the American people themselves. The effect of immigration on them gets lost in a national conversation that inevitably focuses — first, foremost, and usually solely — on the immigrants.

The Latino Vote in Florida and One Texas District: More evidence that it is not monolithic
By Andrew R. Arthur
Whether you prefer "Latino" or "Hispanic" as a designation (I prefer "American", as I stated), the voters in that demographic are not "monolithic", and where they fall on the issue of illegal immigration plainly varies.

 

 

The Implications of Joe Biden's Amnesties: Millions — if not tens of millions — of new immigrants
By Andrew R. Arthur
It is beyond cavil that politicians make promises on the campaign trail that they end up paring back or fail to keep entirely (Mexico has not paid for the barriers along the Southwest border, as then-candidate Trump vowed, for example). There is likely to be a backlash against many of Biden's amnesty proposals, which have gained little attention during his campaign. I would question whether many Americans are actually in favor of having more criminals in their communities, for example.

Tweet This: Social Media on 'the Wall' Becomes Unhinged: CBP chief blocked on Twitter for 'Hateful Conduct', but the facts are the facts
By Andrew R. Arthur
Mark Morgan, the acting commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) had his Twitter account suspended on Wednesday, October 28, for 20 hours. Twitter's basis for that action, according to The Federalist, was that he "apparently violat[ed] platform rules governing 'hateful conduct'".

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