The Center hosted a livestream to discuss today's ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States in Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of the University of California.
The Center streamed an Immigration Newsmaker conversation featuring political consultant and writer Ryan Girdusky, co-author of a new book, They're Not Listening: How the Elites Created the Nationalist Populist Revolution.
Employment improved somewhat more for the native-born, but remains dismal for both groups
An analysis by the Center for Immigration Studies of the May employment data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that while there was some improvement, the number and share of native-born Americans and immigrants (legal and illegal) unemployed remains extraordinarily high.
20 Presidential Actions Needed to Reduce Work Visas and Permits
A new report that outlines 20 actions the president could take immediately that could potentially reduce the number of temporary foreign workers by 1.2 million, or nearly 50 percent.
The Center hosted a livestream to discuss today's ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States in Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of the University of California.
The Center streamed an Immigration Newsmaker conversation featuring political consultant and writer Ryan Girdusky, co-author of a new book, They're Not Listening: How the Elites Created the Nationalist Populist Revolution.
Employment improved somewhat more for the native-born, but remains dismal for both groups
An analysis by the Center for Immigration Studies of the May employment data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that while there was some improvement, the number and share of native-born Americans and immigrants (legal and illegal) unemployed remains extraordinarily high.
20 Presidential Actions Needed to Reduce Work Visas and Permits
A new report that outlines 20 actions the president could take immediately that could potentially reduce the number of temporary foreign workers by 1.2 million, or nearly 50 percent.
DHS can now do a 200-page justification and announce that DACA is being rescinded all over again. Then people can sue again. The case can go right back to the Supreme Court. By not deciding the issue, the Supreme Court can double the amount of litigation over the issue.
DHS has just taken a useful move to deport or deny re-admission to some 4,600 former foreign students who have been abusing the Optional Practical Training program by lying about their employment.
Dan McLaughlin’s piece at National Review nicely explains the absurdity of the Supreme Court’s DACA ruling. In his conclusion, he writes, “DACA repeal will still happen — if Trump is in office long enough for DHS to finish the task.” This is probably true, but not automatic.