Friday, September 2, 2011

The Common Denominator Behind the Constant Opposition to Immigration Reform? The U.S. Congress.


It is no secret -- everyone knows that our U.S. Immigration system is broken. It takes too long to get a green card through work. It is too hard to find a job -- it seems that employers are too eager to say "no visa sponsorship." STEM students are too under-served and forgotten: they need EVEN MORE help -- 17 extra months of OPT is ok, but it is not enough. It is a world-wide embarrassment that we have over 11 million undocumented workers in the United States, living in the shadows in the underground economy; suffering with each whim of unscrupulous employers. With so many millions of people classified as "illegal," it begs the question -- are these people really law breakers, or is the U.S. Immigration law itself broken?


MY VOTE: The U.S. Immigration law itself is broken.


It is also no secret that President Obama wants comprehensive immigration reform. Likewise, former President George W. Bush was equally eager to obtain comprehensive immigration reform. AND WHAT HAPPENED TO BOTH OF THESE WOULD-BE IMMIGRATION REFORMERS? The U.S. Congress blocked immigration reform under BOTH George W. Bush and Barack Obama. But Obama's heart, like Bush's, is in the right place on immigration.

The American Immigration Council has recently published an analysis which details the many ways that the Obama Administration can use, and is using, the existing laws -- already on the books and waiting for implementation by the executive branch -- to fix some parts of the broken immigration system. Other presidents in the recent past (when faced with a do-nothing Congress) have done this and have improved the lot of immigrants through the use of the many powers available at the executive level. And it appears that President Obama is doing likewise.

To read more about the American Immigration Council policy analysis, click here now!



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