Archive for the ‘Illegal Immigration’ Category

Why Trump’s revival of Operation Wetback is more than just deporting all undocumented immigrants – Milwaukee Independent

Trump, who made a similar pledge during his first presidential campaign, has recently repeated this promise at rallies across the country. Trump was referring to Operation Wetback, a military-style campaign launched by the Eisenhower administration in the summer of 1954 to end undocumented immigration by deporting hundreds of thousands of Mexicans. Wetback was a widely used ethnic slur for Mexicans who illegally crossed the Rio Grande, the river dividing Mexico and the U.S.

Trump says that he can replicate Operation Wetback on a much grander scale by setting up temporary immigration detention centers and relying on local, state and federal authorities, including National Guard troops, to remove the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants now living in the U.S.

As a migration scholar, I find Trumps proposal to be both disturbing and misleading. Besides playing to unfounded and dehumanizing fears of an immigrant invasion, it misrepresents the context and impact of Eisenhowers policy while ignoring the vastly changed landscape of U.S. immigration today.

Operation Wetback

In May 1954, U.S. Attorney General Harold Brownell appointed Joseph Swing, a retired general, to lead the Immigration and Naturalization Service, or INS, in a special program to apprehend and deport aliens illegally in this country from areas along the southern border. Until 2003, the INS was responsible for immigration and border control, now handled by multiple federal agencies, including Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Swing ramped up a decade-long practice of using special task forces composed of INS agents who could be rapidly deployed where needed in order to locate and deport undocumented workers. The operation began in California and then spread to Arizona and Texas. INS agents set up roadblocks and raided fields, factories, neighborhoods and saloons where immigrants were working or socializing. The INS also built a vast wire-fenced security camp, according to the Los Angeles Times, in order to detain apprehended immigrants in Los Angeles before sending them to the border.

Captured immigrants were put on hot, overcrowded buses or rickety boats and sent to designated border crossings in Arizona and Texas, where they were forced to cross back into Mexico. Some found themselves stranded in the Mexican desert just over the border. In one incident, 88 migrants died of sunstroke before the Red Cross arrived with water and medical attention. Others were delivered to Mexican authorities, who loaded them onto trains headed deeper into Mexico.

By mid-August, INS agents had deported more than 100,000 immigrants across the U.S. Southwest. Fearing apprehension, thousands more reportedly fled back to Mexico on their own. Most of these immigrants were young Mexican men, but the INS also targeted families, removing nearly 9,000 family members, including children, from the Rio Grande Valley in August. There is also evidence of U.S. citizens getting caught up in the INS sweeps.

Operation Wetback wound down its operations a few months later, and Swing declared in January 1955 that the day of the wetback is over. The INS disbanded its special mobile task forces, and the deportation of undocumented immigrants plummeted over the next decade.

Not just about deportation

Operation Wetback made the headlines and disrupted countless lives, but it was more show than substance when it came to deportation. The governments claim to have deported more than 1 million Mexicans during the summer of 1954 does not stand up to scrutiny. The 1.1 million figure was for the entire fiscal year, which ended in June 1954, and a sizable share of these apprehensions were repeat arrests, sometimes in a single day.

Moreover, over 97% of these deportations occurred without a formal order of removal. Instead, migrants agreed, or were coerced, to leave the country after being apprehended. Despite Trump-like rhetoric decrying a wetback invasion across the U.S.-Mexico border, Operation Wetbacks main objective was not to remove Mexican immigrants but rather to frighten U.S. farmers, especially in Texas, into hiring them legally.

This tactic largely worked. A crucial but often overlooked detail about Operation Wetback is that it happened at the same time as the Bracero Program, a massive guest-worker program between the U.S. and Mexico. Between 1942 and 1964, U.S. employers issued over 4.6 million short-term contracts to more than 400,000 Mexican farm workers. Nearly three-quarters of these contracts were issued between 1955 and 1964 after the INS carried out Operation Wetback.

Operation Wetback is unlikely to have led to a dramatic decline in undocumented immigration had Mexican workers not had a legal option for entering the United States. As one immigrant caught up in Operation Wetback commented, I will come back legally, if possible. If not, Ill just walk across again.

The INS explicitly recognized the connection between the Bracero Program and the decline in undocumented immigration in a 1958 report, stating that should a restriction be placed on the number of braceros allowed to enter the United States, we can look forward to a large increase in the number of illegal alien entrants into the United States.

It is no coincidence that the lull in migrants illegally crossing the U.S-Mexico border after Operation Wetback did not last once the Bracero Program ended in 1964. Mexicans still had strong incentives to migrate, but now they had to do so without visas or work contracts, contributing to a steady increase in border arrests after 1965 that surpassed 1 million in 1976 and reached nearly 2 million in 2000.

Real lessons

If he were to win the presidency again, Trump would have the legal authority to deport undocumented immigrants, but the logistical, political and legal obstacles to doing so quickly and massively are even greater today than they were in the 1950s.

First, most undocumented immigrants now live in cities, where immigrant sweeps are more difficult to carry out. The INS learned this lesson when Operation Wetback shifted from the largely rural Southwest to urban areas in the Midwest and Pacific Northwest in September 1954. Despite transferring hundreds of agents to these locations and using similar tactics, INS agents produced far fewer apprehensions as they struggled to find and detain immigrants.

Second, the U.S. undocumented population is much more dispersed and diverse than in the 1950s. Today, Mexicans are no longer in the majority, and nearly half of undocumented immigrants live outside the six major hubs for immigrants California, Texas, Florida, New York, New Jersey and Illinois.

Third, most undocumented immigrants in the U.S. did not sneak across the border. An estimated 42% entered the country legally but overstayed a visa illegally. Another 17% requested and received a short-term legal status that protects them from immediate deportation.

Finally, mass deportations are likely to spark a more broad-based resistance today than happened in the 1950s. Once staunchly opposed to undocumented immigration, most labor unions and Mexican-American organizations are now in the pro-immigrant camp.

Likewise, the Mexican government, which helped with Operation Wetback, is unlikely to allow massive numbers of non-Mexicans to be deported to its territory without the proper documentation. Trump has not supported a way to provide undocumented immigrants with a legal alternative, which means that migrants will keep finding ways to cross illegally.

Read more:
Why Trump's revival of Operation Wetback is more than just deporting all undocumented immigrants - Milwaukee Independent

Biden Administration Threatens To Sue Oklahoma Over Law Criminalizing Illegal Immigration – The Daily Wire

The Biden administrations Department of Justice (DOJ) is threatening to sue the state of Oklahoma over a new law that would criminalize illegal immigration at the state level.

The threat from the DOJ comes after Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed a bill into law that allows law enforcement agents to arrest suspected illegal immigrants who may be guilty of committing impermissible occupation in Oklahoma.

First and second time convictions carry different penalties, though both would require the illegal immigrant to leave the state of Oklahoma within 72 hours of being released from custody. The Biden DOJ now claims that the law is unconstitutional.

The United States intends to file suit to enjoin the enforcement of HB 4156 unless Oklahoma agrees to refrain from enforcing the law, a letter from DOJ Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney Brian Boynton to the Governor of Oklahoma reads. The United States is committed to the processing of noncitizens consistent with the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). HB 4156 is contrary to that goal.

Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond fired back in a statement of his own, asserting that Oklahoma has a sovereign right to defend its people, and we have a legal obligation to defend our people, to protect our citizens, going on to argue that the Biden administration has abdicated control of the border.

Oklahoma is just one of the several states that has recently passed legislation intended to respond to the unprecedented crisis on the southern border that the Biden administration has presided over.

The DOJ recently sent a similar threat to Iowa, which passed a law designating illegal reentry into the state as an aggravated misdemeanor, thereby allowing the state to arrest illegal immigrants. Those who come into our country illegally have broken the law, yet Biden refuses to deport them, Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds said while defending the legislation.

Texas has also been locked in legal battles with the federal government over legislation that allows state officials to detain and charge illegal immigrants. The Lone Star state also met the federal governments ire when state authorities took control of Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas on the banks of the Rio Grande, asserting that the federal government was allowing illegal immigrants to enter the country by way of the park.

Georgia has also passed legislation requiring jails to check the citizenship status of inmates, a reform largely inspired by the brutal killing of 22-year old Laken Riley by an illegal immigrant from Venezuela.

While the Biden administration continues to threaten lawsuits against states that attempt to curtail illegal immigration, the Democrat president has presided over an unprecedented illegal immigration crisis, with authorities recording over 9.5 million nationwide encounters and 1.7 million estimated illegal immigrant gotaways since Joe Biden took office. There were only 445,000 total reported gotaways for 2018, 2019, and 2020 under the Trump administration.

The Democratic incumbent is now under water with voters on the critical election year issue, with one poll finding that just 20 percent of voters across the country believe that the United States has control over its borders, while a separate survey revealed that only 36 percent of voters approve of Bidens handling of the issue.

Read this article:
Biden Administration Threatens To Sue Oklahoma Over Law Criminalizing Illegal Immigration - The Daily Wire

Farm Bill extension welcome – York News-Times

In the last year, President Biden has allowed 1.2 million illegal aliens into our country through parole. For comparison, the Obama and Trump administrations paroled 5,600 people on average per year. The current administrations refusal to secure our southern border has far-reaching consequences. Its killing our young people by allowing fentanyl to pour into our communities. Its risking our national security as border encounters with known terrorists soar. Its also going to have major ramifications on our elections.

Right now, illegal immigrants are counted in the Census. That data is used to decide how many congressional districts and Electoral College votes a state gets. The Electoral College is how we elect the president. The number of congressional seats can impact which Party controls the House of Representatives. The data is also used for the formula that determines where federal dollars get spent across the country.

By counting illegal immigrants in the Census, were rewarding cities and states that break our immigration laws. States like Nebraska that follows our immigration laws are punished. We would have less representation in Congress, less of a say in who is elected president, and less federal funding. Democrats know this. In fact, they openly admit they are rigging the system. Earlier this year, a video surfaced of Rep. Yvette Clarke, a Democrat from New York, blatantly calling for more illegal immigration to her district. She said she needed more people for redistricting purposes.

The Census policy must change. Only U.S. citizens can vote in federal elections. So it is only right to count citizens in deciding how these Congressional seats, Electoral College votes, and federal funds get divided. To do that, I introduced the Equal Representation Act. It would restore common sense.

I co-led the bill with Senator Bill Hagerty of Tennessee. It would require the Census Bureau to include a citizenship question on any future census. It would also require them to tell the American people how many citizens there actually are. Our bill would also prohibit non-citizens from being counted for the purposes of congressional district and Electoral College apportionment.

Ensuring that congressional representation is based on citizenship shouldnt be a partisan issue. Its a matter of fairness and respecting the law. Our bill recently passed the U.S. House of Representatives. But in the Senate, every Democrat voted to block it. Every Senate Democrat voted to protect an unfair system because it benefits their party. Every Senate Democrat voted to punish states like Nebraska that follow the law. Thats disgraceful. Im going to keep fighting. Republicans need to have enough votes in the Senate to make this a reality.

Without these changes, the number of illegal immigrants flowing across our border will have a major impact on the next Census. The data will then determine the next decade of congressional seats and Electoral College votes. The border crisis has made it clear that fair elections are at risk. We must stop counting illegal aliens in the Census.

My team and I are here to serve you. Contact us anytime by phone at 202-224-4224. You can also view my website at http://www.ricketts.senate.gov/contact.

Get opinion pieces, letters and editorials sent directly to your inbox weekly!

The rest is here:
Farm Bill extension welcome - York News-Times

Family of little girl killed by illegal immigrant shares emotional story, aims to take action in Congress – Yahoo! Voices

EXCLUSIVE: The family of a little girl who died at the hands of an illegal immigrant in October is fighting to prevent similar tragedies in the future by making a change at the highest levels of government.

Three-year-old Maddie Hines was killed when Gabriel Arteaga, who was being sought by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and did not have a driver's license, allegedly ran a stop sign and plowed into the side of the family's SUV.

Maddie's death is what's driving her godfather, Republican state Rep. Stewart Jones, to run for Congress and take action to fix the border crisis, including deporting the millions of people residing in the U.S. illegally. His run is being backed by Maddie's mother, Chelsey, who credits God for providing peace to her family in the aftermath of the tragedy.

LOW AND VILE: WIFE OF WOUNDED VETERAN IN BITTER SENATE PRIMARY UNLEASHES ON GOP OPPONENT'S DISGUSTING ADS

"The main reason I am running for the 3rd Congressional District, is because my goddaughter, Maddie Hines, died senselessly and needlessly due to the actions of an illegal alien," Jones, who has served in the state legislature for five years, told Fox News Digital in an interview alongside Chelsey. "This is really a personal issue to me. I'm going to go to Washington and fix this problem and secure our border."

Jones and his wife have a nearly two-decade-long relationship with the Hines family, who also serve as godparents to their children. He says that, although "Heaven forbid" anything happen to him and his wife, he knows his children will be taken care of.

READ ON THE FOX NEWS APP

Chelsey described to Fox what unfolded on the day of the crash, including how Maddie told her she loved her from the back seat right before their vehicle was struck, killing the child instantly. She said Stewart, who she calls "Stew," was the first to arrive at the scene after the first responders, and that he rode in the ambulance with Maddie and prayed over her.

"It's been really hard, but very peaceful. I feel like God has been with us through it all," she said. "I just felt like that day, time stood still. It literally stood still. People talk about that all the time, but I immediately felt God's love, his peace. It was like an eerie You just can't explain it unless you go through it."

BIDEN CAMPAIGN HIGH ON DOJ'S MARIJUANA SHIFT, SMOKES TRUMP FOR INACTION DURING HIS TERM

"To go through something like that and to have someone like them by our side has been amazing. Stew has gone above and beyond, and I feel like that's his type of personality. Stew, when he sets his mind and his heart on something, and he sees that it needs to change, or he sees that something needs to get done, he gets the job done," she said.

"And so to think that he is running for Congress, I'm like, of course you're running for Congress, and of course you're going to be amazing at it. I have no doubt in my mind," she added.

Arteaga, 25, was charged with one count of reckless homicide and not having a driver's license. The judge presiding over the case revoked his $50,000 bail after he was informed ICE was looking to take him, ensuring he would be available to stand trial, the Clinton Chronicle reported.

Both Chelsey and Stewart lamented the situation at the southern border that led to Maddie's death, and said there were too many stories just like theirs going untold. They also blasted politicians and others who've dismissed any notion of there being a border crisis.

TRUMP'S POTENTIAL RUNNING MATES TO COMPETE FOR APPROVAL AT MAJOR CHRISTIAN CONFERENCE AS SPECULATION SWIRLS

"I've seen interviews where people are laughing, and they are saying the border is not an issue," Chelsey said. "It's not an issue because it doesn't apply to you, and you have not become that statistic yet. And until your family goes through what we have gone through, the loss of a child it's something we deal with every single day."

Jones vowed that, if elected, he would work to deport all illegal immigrants in the U.S., as well as end the programs and benefits he says are driving many of them to come.

"We've got to go after any kind of nonprofit, any kind of program that's supporting and encouraging this illegal activity," he said. "Second and probably most importantly, we've got to complete the wall."

"The third piece to this puzzle is we've got to work with local law enforcement in order to identify and deport those who are here illegally," he added. "I want to make sure that those who have committed crimes stand trial, and the ones that haven't, that are here illegally, we need to get them out of here."

SQUAD MEMBER DEFENDS RIVER TO THE SEA PHRASE INTERPRETED AS CALLING FOR EXTERMINATION OF JEWS

Jones faces a crowded GOP primary field, where the winner will likely become the next member of Congress representing the district considering its strong Republican leanings.

Chelsey says Jones' integrity and character are what make him the best choice among the candidates, and that she gave the approval for him to take Maddie's story and use it to make a difference.

"I completely believe that God has blessed him and God has put him here I feel God has orchestrated everything up to this moment, because he knew that Stew would be the only one that could carry this all the way, and he could get the job done," she said.

"Maddie, even though she's not here, this legacy, and what we stand for, will continue to keep going. And I feel like Stew's the one who can carry that," she added.

The primary will be held Tuesday, June 11. If no candidate reaches a majority, the top two candidates will head to a runoff to be held on June 25.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

Original article source: Family of little girl killed by illegal immigrant shares emotional story, aims to take action in Congress

See the rest here:
Family of little girl killed by illegal immigrant shares emotional story, aims to take action in Congress - Yahoo! Voices

The Effect of the Border Crisis on U.S. Elections – Immigration Blog

One of the biggest enigmas of the administrations immigration and border policies is the whywhy Bidens DHS has ignored congressional migrant detention mandates; why has his DHS secretary tied the hands of immigration enforcement officers; and why is the White House funneling tens of thousands of inadmissible aliens into the country each month with no expectation theyll leave. One theory is that such policies will tilt this election and/or a future one in favor of the president and the Democratic party. But will the presence of millions of illegal aliens have an impact? The answer is likely yes, but it comes with caveats.

Before I continue, though, let me note that I have explained this why several times in the past, based on the administrations own policy pronouncements. The administration wont enforce the immigration laws because it views them as discriminatory and inequitable, as if they were some combination of Jim Crow, Plessy v. Ferguson, and poll taxes, with a healthy dose of old school nativism tossed in. Any other impacts are, from the administrations perspective, just a bonus, or alternatively collateral damage.

The Massive Increase in the Foreign Born Under Biden. My colleagues Steve Camarota and Karen Ziegler recently released an analysis that revealed that the foreign-born population in the United States has hit new highs both in raw numbers and in percentage. As of March 2024, 51.6 million foreign-born individuals were living in this country, comprising 15.6 percent of the U.S. population.

By comparison, during the Great Wave of migration in the 1890s, 9.2 million foreign-born individuals lived here, and they comprised 14.8 percent of the population. When it comes to accommodating and assimilating newcomers, the United States is in uncharted waters.

More saliently, as Camarota and Zeigler point out, the foreign-born population has increased by 6.6 million since President Biden took office, 58 percent of whom are here due to illegal immigration.

Note that Camarota and Ziegler admit this is an undercount, and that the actual number of foreign residents in the United States is larger than they are able to assess and measure. Regardless, its still a massive increase in the number of aliens who are residing here both legally and illicitly.

The Bars to Alien Voting. More than a few (mostly on the right) have raised concerns that at least some of those aliens will vote in the upcoming general election. In response, many (mostly on the left) have contended that aliens cant vote in federal elections, and thus such fears are overblown.

A federal criminal statute, 18 U.S.C. 611, makes it a misdemeanor, punishable with a fine and/or up to one year imprisonment, for:

any alien to vote in any election held solely or in part for the purpose of electing a candidate for the office of President, Vice President, Presidential elector, Member of the Senate, Member of the House of Representatives, Delegate from the District of Columbia, or Resident Commissioner.

There are exceptions for local elections, as well as for certain lawful permanent residents (LPRs or green card holders) who reasonably believed at the time of voting they were U.S. citizens.

Similarly, under section 237(a)(6) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), Any alien who has voted in violation of any Federal, State, or local constitutional provision, statute, ordinance, or regulation is deportable, subject to the same exception under the criminal statute for lawful permanent residents who thought they were citizens. As an immigration judge, I heard a handful of such cases.

On the one hand, making illegal voting a crime and a removable offense should be sufficient to chill any instinct an alien would have to cast a ballot illegally. On the other hand, people violate criminal statutes and aliens commit deportable acts all the time, and Congress plainly must have had some concerns to pass both a criminal provision and a ground of deportability for such an offense.

EO 14019, Promoting Access to Voting. In March 2021, President Biden issued Executive Order (EO) 14019, Promoting Access to Voting, to promote and defend the right to vote for all Americans who are legally entitled to participate in elections and expand access to, and education about, voter registration and election information, and to combat misinformation, in order to enable all eligible Americans to participate in our democracy.

Those are laudable goals in the abstract (with the possible exception of the misinformation part, as its highly subjective, at best), but most notably that EO also calls on federal agency heads to evaluate ways in which the agency can, as appropriate and consistent with applicable law, promote voter registration and voter participation.

Thats not limited to agencies with direct impacts on voting and elections per se (like the Federal Election Commission, or FEC), but also on agencies throughout the government as a whole, including at the Departments of Agriculture (USDA); Housing and Urban Development; and Health and Human Services (HHS).

USDA administers the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), better known as food stamps (although it doesnt issue stamps anymore), while HHS runs the Medicaid program, health benefits available to certain low-income individuals and families who fit into an eligibility group that is recognized by federal and state law.

HHS also has jurisdiction over the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) program, which funds monthly cash assistance payments to low-income families with children, as well as a wide range of services.

While most aliens must wait until five years after they have received their green cards to be eligible for SNAP, TANF, and Medicaid, as I have explained previously, tens (to hundreds) of thousands of Cuban and Haitian nationals paroled into the United States under Biden administration policies are immediately eligible for those benefits, as are refugees and asylees, while all aliens including those here illegally are also eligible for so-called emergency Medicaid.

House Oversight Letter to OMB. Its questionable whether USDA or HHS have authority to, for example, send voter registration forms to every SNAP, Medicaid, or TANF recipient, so its not surprising that Republican members of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee (OAC) sent a letter to the director of the White Houses Office of Management and Budget on May 13 seeking information on how this EO is being implemented.

The members expressed concerns about the lack of constitutional and statutory authority for federal agencies to engage in any activity outside the agencys authorized mission, including federal voting access and registration activities, which were exacerbated by the continued lack of transparency from federal agencies and the White House regarding the implementation of this executive order.

The OAC letter specifically referenced a separate missive from Michael Watson, Mississippi secretary of state, to Attorney General (AG) Merrick Garland seeking guidance on how the EO will impact voter rolls in states where certain felons are ineligible to vote.

Notably, Watson explained therein that his office is:

concerned this program could lead to the registration of illegal aliens in Mississippi. Due to the Biden Administrations border policies, millions of illegal aliens have not only been allowed into this country during the last three years, but they have also been allowed to stay. Many of these aliens have been in the custody of an agency of the Department of Justice including the Marshals. Our understanding is that everyone in the Marshals custody is given a form advising them of their right to register and vote. Providing ineligible non-citizens with information on how to register to vote undoubtedly encourages them to illegally register to vote, exposing them to legal jeopardy beyond their immigration status. [Emphasis added.]

Not included in the OAC communication was a similar letter, this one sent by GOP members of the South Carolina legislature to Gov. Henry McMaster (R), expressing concerns that the states own Department of Health and Human Services has been providing non-citizens with voter registration forms.

The members explained: Earlier this week, a non-citizen refugee contact Representative Adam Morgan with proof that the South Carolina Medicaid office provided her with multiple voter registration forms even after she informed office personnel that she is not a citizen.

That letter does not directly reference EO 14019, but that would be a mighty big coincidence, if true.

Motor Voter and the Potential Impacts of Alien Voting. Which brings me to a 1990s act that takes its fair share of criticism for improper voter registrations. As Simon Hankinson with the Heritage Foundation recently noted:

The 1993 National Voter Registration Act, known as Motor Voter, was intended to make it easier for U.S. citizens to register to vote when they applied for or renewed a drivers license. However, Motor Voter also made it easier for noncitizens to accidentally or purposefully get on voter rolls.

...

Some states are better than others regarding voter integrity. Virginia cross-references Motor Voter data with the Department of Homeland Securitys Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements system, and since 2014, has removed 11,000 declared non-citizen[s] from the voter rolls, according to the Public Interest Legal Foundation. Meanwhile, the foundation is suing Wisconsin and Minnesota for lack of transparency with their voter rolls. [Emphasis added.]

Thats more than a handful of isolated incidents, and Ill note that at a February 2015 hearing, the National Security Subcommittee at House Oversight (where I was staff director at the time), heard testimony from Heritages Hans von Spakovsky, arguably the leading expert on the issue of illegal alien voting.

Among other points, von Spakovsky explained:

In 2005, a GAO report said that it found that 3 percent of the 30,000 individuals called for jury duty from voter registration rolls over a 2-year period in just one United States district court were not U.S. citizens. Now, that may not seem like many, but 3 percent of registered voters would have been more than enough to provide the winning margin in Florida in 2000.

Also present at that hearing was then-Kansas Secretary of State (now Attorney General) Kris Kobach, who contended that the problem of aliens registering and voting is very real, offering evidence of two instances in which aliens had been apparently encouraged to vote illegally in local elections, one of which was decided by one vote.

Presaging the Virginia effort Hankinson referenced, Kobach delineated the problems with identifying aliens on and removing them from voter rolls once they are registered:

Once the alien gets on the voter rolls, there is no magical way you can say that must be an alien or that must be an alien. You cannot identify them once they are on, except for very limited ways, such as using your drivers license database to crossmatch in those limited cases where the drivers license indicates that it is an alien and not a citizen. So, this is an irreversible consequence. Once these individuals get on the voter rolls, you are not going to get them off except in very, very rare circumstances.

The Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act. Kobach explained that Kansas was then one of four states that required applicants to offer proof of citizenship when registering to vote, which brings me to H.R. 8281, the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, introduced on May 7 by Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas).

The SAVE Act would ensure that only U.S. citizens are able to vote in federal elections by requiring states to review, in-person, proof of citizenship from individuals during the voter-registration process, and to strike aliens from voter rolls.

A press release for the SAVE Act quotes Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), who stated:

At a time when trust in voting is more important than ever, we must stop foreign election interference and pass the SAVE Act. Voting is both a sacred right and responsibility of American citizenship, and allowing the people of other nations access to our elections is a grave blow to our security and self-governance.

Congressional Apportionment. Those statements should be self-evident, but even when aliens dont actually vote themselves, their presence in the United States impacts federal elections. Which brings me to congressional apportionment.

By way of background, as the Census Bureau makes clear:

Congressional districts are the 435 areas from which members are elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. After the apportionment of congressional seats among the states, which is based on decennial census population counts, each state with multiple seats is responsible for establishing congressional districts for the purpose of electing representatives. Each congressional district is to be as equal in population to all other congressional districts in a state as practicable.

Notice how the bureau never uses the term citizen in that statement. Thats because congressional districts are apportioned among the states according to how many people live in each state, not how many citizens there are there.

As Hankinson explained:

The more citizens in a state, the more congressional districts i.e., seats in Congress a state gets. In turn, the number of congressional districts in a state determines how many Electoral College votes that state receives.

While president, Donald Trump tried to restore the U.S. citizenship question on the 2020 census and exclude all noncitizens from apportionment calculations. Yet court challenges prevented him from doing so prior to the deadline for getting a new census form printed and distributed.

Heres a simple example of how that plays out with respect to alien residents. According to DATA USA, in 2021, 95.2 percent of the residents of my current home state of North Carolina were U.S. citizens (the national average is 93.4 percent many foreign-born individuals naturalize), a figure that rose to 97.4 percent in the states 11th Congressional District. That means that just 4.8 percent of state residents total, and 2.6 percent in NC-11, were aliens.

Compare that to California, where in 2021, 12.3 of the residents were aliens. In other words, alien residents were more than twice as prevalent, by percentage, in the Golden State than in North Carolina.

In the 44th Congressional District of California, however, aliens comprised 18.4 percent of the population, roughly seven times the percentage of aliens currently living in NC-11.

Moreover, because apportionment never equals out perfectly, there were 766,000 residents in NC-11 and only 714,000 in CA-44, a difference of 52,000 residents.

Thats plainly an issue in itself but do the math and it gets worse. Whereas there were about 746,500 U.S. citizens in NC-11, there were only just fewer than 583,000 citizens in CA-44 a discrepancy of 163,000 citizens between the two districts in 2021.

Not all of those citizens can vote (some are younger than 18, and others are barred from voting), but a candidate for representative in NC-11 has to hustle for tens of thousands of more votes than his colleague in CA-44, and there was consequently a marginal but significant increase in each individual citizens voting power in the California district.

And because the electoral college is based, in part, on the number of congressional seats, that additional voting power in any given district translates to presidential elections, as well, buffered to some degree by the fact that Senate seats count toward state electors, too, and each state has two senators.

That discrepancy may be part of the reason why the current occupant of NC-11, Chuck Edwards (R), sponsored H.R. 7109, the Equal Representation Act (ERA). The bill would add a question to the 2030 census asking respondents to state whether they and/or other members of their households are U.S. citizens and require the Census Bureau to exclude aliens from the subsequent count for apportionment.

The ERA passed the House on May 8 on a party-line vote of 206 Republicans in favor and 202 Democrats opposed (11 members from each party didnt vote), which shows that its going nowhere in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

If you are wondering why Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D) isnt in a hurry to pass the ERA, consider the fact that while the population of his home state of New York increased by about 823,000 residents between the 2010 and 2020 censuses, that increase did not match the growth in the country as a whole, and so the state lost one congressional seat in the last decennial apportionment.

The influx of migrants who have arrived in the Empire State thanks to the administrations border policies, however, would help New York hold on to the seats it currently holds and possibly add at least one but only if apportionment isnt limited to citizens. Heavily Democratic California also lost a seat, and the migrant surge would likely help there, too.

That said, red-state Texas and Florida would gain as well, but neither has had much of a problem of late convincing residents to abandon California and the Northeast and resettle in their environs. California and New York, on the other hand, need the aliens to maintain their respective electoral power.

Dont Overstate the Effect of the Border in Coming Elections but Dont Discount It Either. The key takeaway is that, while you shouldnt overstate the impact that millions of migrants who have entered illegally will have on either the next election or coming ones, you shouldnt discount it, either.

Some migrants will likely attempt to register and vote, but theres no way to state that it will be so few that it wont make any difference or so many that it will tip the balance. When newcomers are receiving free food, housing, and medical care on the taxpayers dime, more than a few will likely conclude voting is just another perk of illicit entry.

Worse, however, unless there are razor-thin margins in key states, no ones likely to go and try to figure out how many alien voters cast ballots illegally. Just the threat, however, is likely enough to convince some citizens to conclude that the game is rigged and stay home on Election Day.

If the president wants to defend the right to vote for all Americans who are legally entitled to participate in elections as he claims, he should start by preventing illicit alien voting and the SAVE Act is a great place to start. And if he wants all eligible Americans to participate in our democracy, he may consider the ERA, a bill that places the electoral power in the hands of each citizen, equally.

Link:
The Effect of the Border Crisis on U.S. Elections - Immigration Blog