Immigration reduction is a campaign in the United States that advocates reducing the number of immigrants allowed to enter the United States. Steps to reduce the number of immigrants include promoting more powerful measures to prevent illegal entry and illegal entry, and reduction of nonimmigrant temporary work visas (such as H - 1 B and L - 1) . Some people insist on stricter legal immigration requirements to reduce the total population or to shift the proportion of legal immigrants from a family reunification plan rate to skill based standards.
In the United States illegal entry is always a problem. The solution is to create and implement immigration reform. The only problem is which reform is selected and implemented. Americans believe immigrants are stealing work Americans think that past immigration bills are related to politics, immigration and politics, and future American immigration and immigration issues. Not only in black and white, the story always has at least two aspects, usually more. I would like to tell my party, or at least a party I live in Mexico's border zone Arizona.
Over the years the United States has required comprehensive immigration reform. There is no doubt that the United States needs a safe border, but there is also a need to deal with the millions of immigrants that are coming here and contributing to society. A summary of viable immigration reform has been known for many years: strengthen border security, create a process for those who did the right thing here, and for legal status and potential citizenship I am lagging behind. In this plan, we take into account the concerns of both parties and enhance US security while securing humanitarian outcomes. Unfortunately, Republicans' opposition to "brothers" have prevented this commonsense reform for many years.
In 2005, Senators John McCain and Ted Kennedy resumed discussions on comprehensive immigration reforms through "safe US and immigration laws" incorporating legalization, visiting worker programs, and strengthening border security Did. This bill has never been voted in the Senate, but a part of it has been included in the Senate proposal later. In 2006, the House of Representatives and the Senate created their own conflicting bills. In December 2005, the House passed the 2005 border protection, terrorism countermeasure and illegal immigration control law under the auspices of James Sen Brenner parliamentarians (R - WI). The bill is confined to law enforcement agencies and focuses on the border and inland areas. In the Senate, the 2006 General Immigration Reform Act (CIRA) was sponsored by Senator Arlen Specter (R - PA) and passed in May 2006.