Elections & Voting

Elections & Voting

The growth in the immigrant population has helped to strengthen and remake America over the last two decades. Today, as thousands of baby boomers retire each day, working-age immigrants are filling gaps in the labor market, paying billions of dollars in taxes that help our entitlement programs survive, and buying homes in communities that would otherwise be in decline. Millions of immigrants have also earned U.S. citizenship and the right to vote while millions more are estimated to be eligible to naturalize.

Immigration Reform Would Alleviate America’s Aging Crisis, New Research Briefs Show

Immigration Reform Would Alleviate America’s Aging Crisis, New Research Briefs Show

CONTACT: Sarah Doolin, [email protected] New York, NY—To mark Senior Citizens Day, which honors the elderly and their role in American life, the New American Economy (NAE) released four research briefs that examine the role immigrants play in alleviating the… Read More

Six Takeaways from the First Presidential Debate on Immigration Issues

Six Takeaways from the First Presidential Debate on Immigration Issues

In Cleveland, Ohio, home to nearly half a million immigrants, 10 Republican presidential candidates took to the stage in the first primary debate of the season. Given the pressing need to reform our outdated immigration system, it was no surprise that one of the early questions posed… Read More

Medicare at Fifty and the Near $200-Billion Surplus from Immigrant Contributions

Medicare at Fifty and the Near $200-Billion Surplus from Immigrant Contributions

  CONTACT Sarah Doolin, New American Economy, [email protected] NAE Announces a Two-Month Campaign on Immigration and the United States Healthcare System New York, NY — With tomorrow being the 50th anniversary of Medicare, the New American Economy (NAE) has released a new video ad that… Read More

How Growing Latino Economic and Political Power Prevailed Over Donald Trump

How Growing Latino Economic and Political Power Prevailed Over Donald Trump

When Donald Trump threw his hat into the ring for the GOP Presidential nomination, he made some of the most racist and offensive remarks ever made by a modern-day Presidential candidate, calling Mexican’s “rapists” and criminals. In making these charged remarks he ignored a critical new reality in… Read More

A lesson in demographics

A lesson in demographics

The Wall Street Journal reports: Six years after the recession ended, the nation’s birthrate has begun to climb again. For every 1,000 women of childbearing age last year, there were 62.9 births, up from 62.5 births in 2013, according to data released Wednesday by… Read More

Business forum discusses bringing international talent to Louisville

Business forum discusses bringing international talent to Louisville

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — Welcoming people from other countries and encouraging them to get involved in the local business scene was the goal of a forum today at the Seelbach Hilton. Greater Louisville Inc. and several other groups talked about how the city can attract economic talent from around the… Read More

A Rubio 2016 blueprint, for all to see

A Rubio 2016 blueprint, for all to see

It isn’t often that a presidential campaign blueprint comes packaged between covers and available in bookstores and online for all to see. But that’s the inescapable conclusion from looking through the pages of the book entitled, “2016 and Beyond,” by Republican pollster Whit Ayres. Ayres is one… Read More

Louisville's immigrant labor force is larger than national average, study finds

Louisville’s immigrant labor force is larger than national average, study finds

Louisville’s percentage of immigrants in its work force is higher than the national average and higher than in peer cities Cincinnati, Nashville and St. Louis, according to a study released by Americas Society, Council of the Americas and the Partnership for a New American Economy. The Partnership for a… Read More

Republicans Hope To Avoid Mitt Romney's Mistakes On Immigration

Republicans Hope To Avoid Mitt Romney’s Mistakes On Immigration

WASHINGTON — In the summer of 2011, as then-Texas Gov. Rick Perry was preparing to announce his run for the Republican presidential nomination, top aides to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney set about figuring out how to beat him. They found a potential weak spot: immigration. Perry had expressed some… Read More

Why Louisville Needs to Go Global

Why Louisville Needs to Go Global

Recently, our region welcomed more than 170,000 visitors from around the country and the world for the 141st running of the Kentucky Derby. Every year during this time, we show the world the best of what Greater Louisville has to offer. While Derby is a grand show and source of… Read More

All gifts are matched dollar for dollar

No one should face the immigration system alone

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