This week, the Senate began debate over a massive immigration reform bill cobbled together by a bipartisan group of senators and the Bush administration, a compromise proposal that Arlen Specter has extravagantly dubbed the "grand bargain." As rumored several weeks ago, the bill includes a set of initiatives (apparently included at the behest of the Bush administration) that would radically accelerate the Clinton-era trend of eroding the place of family unity as a foundational principle underlying U.S. immigration policy. The system contemplated by the grand bargainers would eliminate most of the existing family-based immigration preference categories (and all of the existing employment-based preference categories) in favor of a new "points"-based scheme that prioritizes highly-skilled, highly-educated, and English-speaking professionals; under the points scheme, family ties would carry negligible weight. Immigration by spouses and minor children of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents would remain unchanged, but the grand bargain would eliminate family-based immigration for adult children of U.S. citizens and permanent residents and siblings of U.S. citizens. The proposal would also cap immigration by parents of adult U.S. citizens, who currently can immigrate without numerical restriction.
4 Comments:
At 7:30 PM,
Matt said…
his is a nice post. I don't favor removing the family based categories as strongly as this bill does. I'd tie connections other than the 'immediate relative' connections into a points system (similar to Canada's, perhaps) but would give them more points than those here. But I'd do this because of the reasons you mention- there's reason to think those with strong family ties will do better as immigrants. For immediate relatives I'd say that immigration rights should be seen as a matter of right, but not as the right of the would-be immigrant but of the current citizens. As such it's reasonable to let the citizens determine how far these grants as a matter of right should extend though it will be hard, if not impossible, to make them not include spouses and minor children. The only thing I'd do a bit different from you is to emphasise a bit more that the other cases are ones for political deliberation and not a matter of right.
At 9:13 PM,
Michael C. Dorf said…
I'll let Anil correct me if I'm wrong, but I imagine that when he says there should be various "rights" to family immigration he means legal right as enshrined by statute as the product of political deliberation, rather than constitutional right.
At 10:46 PM,
Matt said…
Sure- that's not something I disagree with. I say something more about this sort of thing here:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=979225
though not as directly as I hope to say somewhere else eventually. Of course I don't think the US constitution requires exactly what justice does.
At 10:48 PM,
Matt said…
Hmm, I'm not able to get the link in right. The address is this:
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=979225
for what that's worth.
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