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.

Editorial: Immigration reform needed

Editorial: Immigration reform needed

Yes, Wisconsin needs immigrants — and the nation needs immigration reform. Current policies and proposals to reduce immigration or deport undocumented workers fly in the face of what the nation needs to maintain a healthy economy. That’s especially true in places like rural Wisconsin, as a coalition of Wisconsin business… Read More

Help Wanted: Immigration Policy Reform

Help Wanted: Immigration Policy Reform

Wisconsin is home to roughly 71,000 undocumented immigrants. These individuals are far more likely than the native-born population to be in the prime of their working years.  Saying that essential jobs in Wisconsin’s economy can’t be filled without foreign workers, a coalition of Wisconsin business and civic leaders on Wednesday launched a… Read More

Lincoln v. Trump on Immigration

Lincoln v. Trump on Immigration

Although much has been written about how the party of Abraham Lincoln became the party of Donald Trump, one additional area where these two men parted ways is immigration. The world of today is different from the world in which Abraham Lincoln lived or could have imagined. And I… Read More

Humayun Khan and America’s Debt to Foreign-Born Service Members

Humayun Khan and America’s Debt to Foreign-Born Service Members

Khizr and Ghazala Khan appeared at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia last week to honor their son Capt. Humayun Khan, who was killed in Iraq in 2004 while serving in the U.S. Army. The controversy that followed could not have been predicted with the Republican candidate attacking the… Read More

To Avoid Labor Shortage, Economic Expert Recommends Immigration Reform

To Avoid Labor Shortage, Economic Expert Recommends Immigration Reform

As president and CEO of economic research and analysis firm The Perryman Group, Dr. Ray Perryman has spent the past 40 years researching what makes the American economy tick. And one thing our economy depends upon is immigration. “The numbers are overwhelming,” Perryman says of the nation’s need for immigrants,… Read More

Tim Kaine’s Views on Immigration Policy

Tim Kaine’s Views on Immigration Policy

Democratic Presidential Candidate, Hillary Clinton has named Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia as her Vice-Presidential running mate. Read More

After Receiving Legal Status, Child Immigrant Strives to Give Back

After Receiving Legal Status, Child Immigrant Strives to Give Back

Arcela Nunez-Alvarez was just 12 years old when she left Mexico with her mother and sisters to move to the northern San Diego suburb of San Marcos in the early 1980s. Yet her immigration experience was vastly different than those of undocumented arrivals today. A beneficiary of former President Ronald… Read More

Tracking Hillary Clinton’s Promises on Immigration Reform

Tracking Hillary Clinton’s Promises on Immigration Reform

By 2050, minorities will become the majority in the United States. This is the first point Hillary Clinton made while speaking before the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) in Washington D.C. this week.  In a pointed speech, which she spent much of criticizing her opponent… Read More

One Pennsylvania Town Illustrates the Difficult Immigration Debate Ahead

One Pennsylvania Town Illustrates the Difficult Immigration Debate Ahead

Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania is a manufacturing town that has seen hard economic times. After the coal mining industry disappeared, factories involved in shoemaking, dressmaking, ironwork and television manufacturing moved in. These industries tended to employ less-educated workers. However, these factories are no longer faring well, and local workers have lost… Read More

Patricia Serrano’s Son Just Graduated from Williams College, But She Couldn’t Attend the Ceremony

Patricia Serrano’s Son Just Graduated from Williams College, But She Couldn’t Attend the Ceremony

As an undocumented immigrant who came to southern California from Mexico 22 years ago, Patricia Serrano has achieved part of the American dream: She raised a son who recently graduated from prestigious Williams College in western Massachusetts. However, she could not fly cross-country to see him receive his diploma, because… Read More

All gifts are matched dollar for dollar

No one should face the immigration system alone

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