Parsing Immigration Policy Podcast
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Who Was Barbara Jordan and Why Does Her Work Still Matter Today? ([link removed])
Immigration is good, but more is not always better
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Washington, D.C. (August 5, 2021) – Few politicians have studied United States immigration and immigration policies as comprehensively as the late civil-rights icon, the first African American congresswoman to come from the Deep South, and chairwoman of President Clinton's Commission on Immigration Reform ([link removed]) , U.S. Representative Barbara Jordan (TX). The bi-partisan commission produced guiding principles for American immigration policies as well as specific recommendations - all but one recommendation was unanimous.
This week Parsing Immigration Policy ([link removed]) features Eric Ruark, director of research at NumbersUSA, an immigration advocacy organization that has become the unofficial steward of the Jordan Commission’s reports and research. Ruark discusses the Jordan Commission’s report, how the Commission defined the purpose of immigration laws and the key recommendations, including a reduction in legal immigration and ending illegal immigration. Jordan advocated for a system that was in the best interest of the American people and protected the most vulnerable U.S. workers as opposed to employers.
Jordan’s early death freed President Clinton from backing the Commission’s recommendations.
As a follow-up to the discussion of formulating U.S. immigration policy, this week’s closing commentary explains a different method of setting levels of Immigration. Mark Krikorian, the Center’s executive director and host of Parsing Immigration Policy ([link removed]) , describes and advocates the Jordan Commission’s recommendation of emphasizing the desired categories of immigrants, rather than numerical caps.
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Related Articles:
Remembering Barbara Jordan and Her Immigration Legacy ([link removed])
The Unifying Voice We Need in the Immigration Debate ([link removed])
Barbara Jordan Made 1994 a High-Water Mark in the Effort to Stop Illegal Immigration ([link removed])
The Barbara Jordan Commission ([link removed])
Barbara Jordan’s Vision of Immigration Reform ([link removed])
The Americanization Ideal ([link removed])
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