Share Share
Tweet Tweet
Share Share
Report
The Most Important Immigration Rulings of 2022 and the Forecast for 2023
By Elizabeth Jacobs, January 12, 2023
Excerpt: Over the past few years, federal judges have played an increasing powerful role in the U.S. government’s ability to implement immigration policies and programs. 2022 was no different. Here is a recap of some of last year’s most important judicial decisions that have helped or hindered immigration enforcement efforts (or lack thereof) across the United States. Understanding these rulings is crucial to forecasting what’s to come in 2023.
Commentary
Biden’s Immigration Proposal: Lotsa Carrot, Not Much Stick
By Mark Krikorian
DC Journal, January 11, 2023
Excerpt: In the immigration sense, parole is the narrow power Congress has given the president to admit individual foreigners without visas in emergencies. But Biden has been using it to let in people by the hundreds of thousands, and his new plan proposes to let in hundreds of thousands more. This is on top of the 1 million people who come in each year through the actual legal immigration system.

Biden’s Border Policies Facilitate Shocking Modern Slavery
By Jessica M. Vaughan
New York Post, January 10, 2023
Excerpt: The Biden border policies have literally been contributing to the human-trafficking problem every single day since Jan. 20, 2021, when the president began dismantling immigration enforcement, resulting in the mass-migration crisis that continues today.

The damning truth about Biden's new illegal migrant 'crackdown' - he's just going to make it even easier for millions to come in.
By Todd Bensman
Daily Mail, January 10, 2023
Excerpt: Watch closely America, President Joe Biden is about to perform his greatest border crisis cover-up yet. It's a scheme to hide a massive new acceleration of human inflows into the United States behind trickery, misdirection, and probable illegality - and then laughlingly call it progress.

Democrats undermine working class with open borders and illegal labor
By Steven Camarota
New York Post, January 9, 2023
Excerpt: Wages for working-class Americans are not keeping up with inflation. Moreover, a near-record number of Americans are now out of the labor force entirely. And yet many liberals — avowed friends of the American worker — are calling for more immigration  so that employers don’t have to raise wages and get Americans back to work.
Podcast
The Coming End of Title 42
Host: Mark Krikorian
Guests: Andrew R. Arthur & George Fishman
Parsing Immigration Policy, Episode 87
Featured Posts 
Immigration Crowds Out Native Workers
By Jason Richwine
New immigrants tend to settle in areas with high demand for labor, reducing the potential rewards for natives who were thinking about moving there. Conversely, immigration can actually encourage movement away from places with abrupt increases in the labor supply.

Biden Visits ‘Potemkin Village’ Version of El Paso
By Andrew R. Arthur
For the first time since at least 2008, Joe Biden visited the Southwest border on Sunday. The only problem is that it was apparently a “Potemkin village” version of the border, with Biden visiting El Paso only after the city had been largely cleared of migrants.
The Mexican Backstory to Drone Images of Thousands Crossing the Rio Grande
By Todd Bensman
Excerpt: The flying cameras of Fox News shined a brilliant light on these arriving groups, stunned much of the public, spurred Republican lawmakers to voice outrage, and may well have contributed to President Joe Biden’s January decision to finally visit the border. But the Mexican side of the story here in El Moral has remained dark, though it probably stands as by far the more disturbing half of the story.

Mexican President Thanks Biden — For Not Building the ‘Wall’
By Andrew R. Arthur
Excerpt: Border infrastructure may not be “sexy”, but fences, roads, cameras, and lights are critical to control of the Southwest border.
 More Blog Posts 
Mark Krikorian joins Neil Cavuto to discuss President Biden's recent visit to the Southwest border.
Donate
Facebook
https://twitter.com/CIS_org
Google Plus
LinkedIn
RSS
Copyright © 2023 Center for Immigration Studies, All rights reserved. 

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

View this e-mail in your browser.