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Senate Immigration Bill Would Allow 66 Million New Legal Immigrants over the Next Twenty Years

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This entry was posted on 5/15/2006 3:43 PM and is filed under Political Issues,National Security,Role of Government.

 Senate Immigration Bill Would Allow 66 Million New Legal Immigrants over the Next Twenty Years
by Robert Rector
May 15, 2006
Heritage Foundation WebMemo #1076

 

If enacted, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (CIRA, S.2611) would be the most dramatic change in immigration law in 80 years, allowing an estimated 66 million persons to legally immigrate to the U.S. over the next 20 years—fully one-third of the current population of the United States.

 

Much attention has been given to the fact that the bill grants amnesty to some 10 million illegal immigrants. Little or no attention has been given to the fact that the bill would quintuple the rate of legal immigration into the United States, raising, over time, the inflow of legal immigrants from around one million per year to over five million per year. The impact of this increase in legal immigration dwarfs the magnitude of the amnesty provisions.

 

In contrast to the 66 million immigrants permitted under CIRA, current law allows 19 million legal immigrants over the next twenty years. Relative to current law, then, CIRA would add an extra 84 million legal immigrants to the nation’s population.

 

The figure of 66 million legal immigrants is a reasonable estimate of the actual immigration inflow under the bill and not the maximum number that would be legally permitted to enter. The maximum number that could legally enter would be almost 200 million over twenty years—over 180 million more legal immigrants than current law permits.

Continue Reading Senate Immigration Bill Would Allow 100 Million New Legal Immigrants over the Next Twenty Years at The Heritage Foundation website.

 

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