New York Times readers respond to Clinton promise to go further than Obama on executive immigration actions

By Jeremy Beck

The editorial board of the New York Times took a cautiously favorable view of Hillary Clinton’s promise to take President Obama’s executive actions on immigration further than his administration believes is within the law. The editorial and Clinton’s comments define the immigration debate as strictly a question of what to do with the 11 million … Continued

Before you blame an immigrant, would you blame an unemployed college grad?

By Jeremy Beck

Neil Irwin of The Upshot says a variety of factors have likely resulted in less-educated workers getting hammered, including workers moving from shrinking industries to growing ones: “…perhaps a rise in automation and globalization is eliminating manufacturing jobs, and the people who once held those jobs are now competing for work as janitors and food … Continued

White House’s determination to avoid work permit debate starting to look silly

By Jeremy Beck

Administration officials have been telling the media that federal judge Andrew Hanen’s injunction against President Obama’s November executive actions on immigration limits the administration’s ability to prioritize deportations. President Obama says that’s nonsense. Media reports this week were full of language like this from the Wall Street Journal: “neither a judge’s ruling nor a standoff … Continued

Parsing the media coverage of the temporary injunction

By Jeremy Beck

This week, a federal judge temporarily halted President Obama’s most recent executive actions on immigration. But what exactly does that mean? Josh Gerstein of Politico explained the decision as well as anyone: “The injunction paralyzed Wednesday’s planned expansion of Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which started in 2012, and grants temporary work permits … Continued

Govt statistics related to DHS funding debate go unreported by mainstream media

By Jeremy Beck

A week ago, the Center for Immigration Studies made public some government statistics it obtained through a Freedom Of Information Act request from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. USCIS’ data show that since 2009, the executive branch has issued 982,000 new work permits to citizens of other countries who were in the United States illegally. … Continued

Lawsuit challenges Obama & GOP thinking on high-skilled immigration

By Jeremy Beck

Could we be on the brink of a shift in conventional wisdom when it comes to high-skilled immigration? “It is no secret that our country is suffering from a shortage of workers in the science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields.” O’Sullivan scoffs: “Corporate America’s usual excuse – that it is importing workers to do … Continued

Evidence from the MSM suggests executive action will incentivize more illegal immigration

By Jeremy Beck

Liberal and conservative pundits agree: the executive actions President Obama announced last week will encourage more illegal immigration. The President is granting work permits to millions in the country illegally and discouraging enforcement against future unlawful aliens who make it into the interior of the country (either by overstaying a visa or successfully eluding capture … Continued

Count New York Times readers among the 74 percent opposed to executive action on immigration

By Jeremy Beck

The New York Times editorial “Mr. Obama’s Moment on Immigration,” garnered 458 comments, 322 of which made the “Readers’ Picks” list. Of those 322, I counted 25 that supported the editorial’s pro-executive-action stance. Of the 25 comments in favor of executive action, 21 were recommended ten times or less. None of the 25 received more … Continued

The New York Times Moral Blinders

By Jeremy Beck

In his new Center for Immigration Studies backgrounder, “Sulzberger’s Voice,” former Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist Jerry Kammer details how the New York Times editorial page became a destructive voice in the immigration debate by taking an intolerant view of – and casting aspersions on – those who disagree with their policy preferences. Kammer has also written backgrounders … Continued