How Immigration Has Transformed the Electorate, 2000 to 2020
By Steven A. Camarota and Karen Zeigler
Analysis of Census Bureau data shows that the population of adult immigrants and their adult U.S.-born children has grown dramatically, but unevenly, across the country since 2000 as a share of eligible voters. New Jersey, Texas, Maryland, California, Georgia, Virginia, and North Carolina in particular have experienced dramatic increases in the share of eligible voters who are immigrants or their children.
The Knock-On Impacts of Trump's Immigration Policies in the Years Ahead
By David North
These restricting factors will stay with us for several years, though they may be overshadowed by a large amnesty or a massive increase in refugee numbers. But, as my colleague Steven Camarota wrote recently, international migration is not an uncontrollable phenomenon — policy matters.
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