
Chain Migration refers to the endless and often-snowballing chains of foreign nationals who are allowed to immigrate because the law allows citizens and lawful permanent residents to bring in their extended, non-nuclear family members.
Chain Migration is the primary mechanism that has caused legal immigration in this country to quadruple from about 250,000 per year in the 1950s and 1960s to more than one million a year since 1990. As such, it is one of the chief culprits in America's current record-breaking population boom and all the attendant sprawl, congestion, school overcrowding, and other impacts that reduce American's quality of life.
Chain Migration refers to the endless and often-snowballing chains of foreign nationals who are allowed to immigrate because the law allows citizens and lawful permanent residents to bring in their extended, non-nuclear family members.
Chain Migration is the primary mechanism that has caused legal immigration in this country to quadruple from about 250,000 per year in the 1950s and 1960s to more than one million a year since 1990. As such, it is one of the chief culprits in America's current record-breaking population boom and all the attendant sprawl, congestion, school overcrowding, and other impacts that reduce American's quality of life.
Chain Migration is about family reunification beyond the nuclear family. Until the late 1950s, America's immigration tradition of family unity had only included spouses and minor children. But since then, immigrants can also send for their siblings, parents and adult children. These non-nuclear family members actually get precedence over an immigrant’s nuclear family. This ill-conceived system also creates incentives for illegal immigration because adult relatives of legal residents are known to overstay their visas (becoming illegal aliens) in hopes of becoming legal immigrants. Moreover, since hundreds of millions of people in the world have a relative in the U.S., the migration chain can eventually reach them all.
The claim that chain migration is about “family reunification” ignores the fact that each immigrant who comes to the U.S. “disunites” another family by leaving some new relatives behind. If a person really wants to live near his/her extended family, he/she should remain in the country where that extended family lives. Except for the very small percentage of each year's newcomers who are refugees, nobody is forcing immigrants to leave their families.
On Feb. 15, 2011, Rep. Phil Gingrey introduced H.R. 692, the Nuclear Family Priority Act. The bill would end Chain Migration by eliminating several of the family preference visa classes that allow adult relatives to receive legal permanent residency status in the United States. Parents of U.S. citizens would be eligible for a renewable visa provided the immigrant's son or daughter can prove that they can financially support their parents and provide health insurance coverage.
Thursday, February 4, 2010, 11:14 AM EST - posted on NumbersUSA

Rep. Parker Griffith
Elected Officials Who...
Rep. Parker Griffith (R-Ala.), who recently switched his party affiliation from the Democrats to the Republicans, has sponsored three of NumbersUSA's "5 Great Immigration-Reduction Bills." Rep. Griffith has already been a cosponsor of the SAVE Act.
Rep. Griffith added his name to the list of sponsors for Rep. Phil Gingrey's Chain Migration bill (H.R.878), Rep. Bob Goodlatte's Visa Lottery elimination bill (H.R.2305), and Rep. Nathan Deal's end to Birthright Citizenship Act (H.R.1868).
The Chain Migration bill would eliminate the extended family visas that allow married sons and daughters of citizens and legal permanent residents to come to the United States. The Visa Lottery elimination bill would end the program that issues 50,000 visas without consideration for humanitarian need, family connection, or other economic or cultural value to the United States. The Birthright Citizenship Act would require at least one parent of a child born in the United States to be either a U.S. citizen or a legal permanent resident before giving the newborn full citizenship.
See all the sponsors for NumbersUSA's 5 Great Immigration-Reduction Bills.
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Legislative Analysis - Friday, September 5, 2008
Congressional Testimony - Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Congressional Testimony - Friday, September 1, 1995
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