Stories

Stories

Lubbock Avalanche-Journal Opinion: Rescinding the Texas Dream Act would hurt the state’s economy

Lubbock Avalanche-Journal Opinion: Rescinding the Texas Dream Act would hurt the state’s economy

When I first spoke with a mentor at Texas Tech University’s Honors College in 2011, I was a Fort Worth high school senior ranked at the top of my class. But because I was an undocumented immigrant, I didn’t know if I’d be able to go to college. He… Read More

The Kansas City Star Commentary: Kobach, Yoder campaigns said immigrants are scary. Their loss proves we’re changing

The Kansas City Star Commentary: Kobach, Yoder campaigns said immigrants are scary. Their loss proves we’re changing

Over the past few weeks, we have watched as the Trump administration’s nativist, anti-immigrant ideology has brought our government to a grinding halt. The partial federal shutdown has directly impacted the well-being of more than 800,000 federal workers, their families and the American people who rely on government services. Read More

Des Moines Register Opinion: For millennials, immigration policy is personal and drives political activism

Des Moines Register Opinion: For millennials, immigration policy is personal and drives political activism

Last spring, after graduating from Drake University, I spent months canvassing my congressional district for Progressive Turnout Project, an organization designed to get out the vote for Democrats. Like many millennials in the state, I was inspired by progressive candidates like… Read More

Free Times Opinion: Sound Off: It’s Time to Protect South Carolina’s Dreamers

Free Times Opinion: Sound Off: It’s Time to Protect South Carolina’s Dreamers

With the government shutdown continuing, pundits are asking whetherPresident Trump might resurrect a deal that came tantalizingly close last year: reopening the government and funding a border wall in exchange for protecting Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients, the… Read More

NAE Gifts Back Sweepstakes: Abbreviated Rules

NAE Gifts Back Sweepstakes: Abbreviated Rules

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.  Void where prohibited.  Open to residents of the 50 United States (incl. DC), who are 18+ (19+ in NE and AL; 21+ in MS) at entry.  Begins 12:00 PM ET on 12/14/18; ends 12:00 PM ET on 1/3/19.  To enter, follow Sponsor on Instagram and comment on… Read More

Voters in House Districts that Flipped Are More Educated, More Diverse than in 2013

Voters in House Districts that Flipped Are More Educated, More Diverse than in 2013

NEW YORK, NY — As additional House races are called in the weeks following the 2018 midterm election, new analysis from New American Economy shows a clearer picture of the changing electorate in key districts. In nearly every district that has flipped (so far*) from Republican to Democratic control, the… Read More

After Serving U.S. in Wartime, Iraqi Immigrant Finds New Purpose in Madison

After Serving U.S. in Wartime, Iraqi Immigrant Finds New Purpose in Madison

Saif Al Saedi grew up in a family of seven children in Baghdad. He was 16 years old when U.S. forces invaded the capital city and 17 when, in 2004, he got a job providing security for U.S. troops in Ramadi, the focus of Al Qaeda activity at the time. Read More

New American Economy Releases the NAE Cities Index, a First-Ever Analysis Measuring How Effectively Cities are Integrating Immigrants

New American Economy Releases the NAE Cities Index, a First-Ever Analysis Measuring How Effectively Cities are Integrating Immigrants

NEW YORK, NY – Today, on Citizenship Day, hundreds of civic and business leaders, including Members of Congress, mayors, city council members, and chamber of commerce executives, joined New American Economy to release the NAE Cities Index—the first comprehensive, national assessment of immigrant integration policy and socioeconomic outcomes… Read More

Nursing Home Staffed by Immigrants Fills Urgent Healthcare Needs

Nursing Home Staffed by Immigrants Fills Urgent Healthcare Needs

John Barker bought the bankrupt Commonwealth Care Center, a nursing home in northwest St. Paul, in 1991 and vowed to “make it a place people wanted to come to.” He spent years upgrading the facility, adding two floors, dozens of private rooms, and modern air conditioning and heating. He renamed… Read More

After a Career in Computer Science, Cambodian Immigrant Focuses on Community

After a Career in Computer Science, Cambodian Immigrant Focuses on Community

In 1978, after receiving a computer science degree from American University in Washington, D.C., Pasin Chanou knew that he could not return to his native Cambodia. Three years earlier, the Khmer Rouge had brutally gained power and threatened his family’s gemstone business. His parents feared for their lives and fled… Read More

All gifts are matched dollar for dollar

No one should face the immigration system alone

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