Author Topic: DONALD J. TRUMP STATEMENT ON NEW CENSUS DATA SHOWING RECORD IMMIGRATION GROWTH  (Read 526 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

HAPPY2BME

  • Guest
Donald J. Trump issued the following statement today on a new report from the Center for Immigration Studies, based on U.S. Census Bureau Data, showing record immigration growth in the United States:

"Record rates of immigration have produced lower wages and higher unemployment for U.S. workers. Pew polling shows 83 percent of all voters - Democrats, Republicans and Independents - think immigration should be frozen or reduced. The biggest beneficiaries of allowing fewer foreign workers into our country would be minority workers, including all immigrants now living here, who are competing for jobs, benefits and community resources against record waves of foreign workers. Limiting job competition would reopen pathways to middle-class stability and shrink welfare rolls. In addition, it would relieve overcrowding in our schools and hospitals that afflict our poorest communities. Yet, Senators Cruz and Rubio have led the charge for even higher immigration rates - a policy supported by only 7 percent of the Republican electorate. When I am President we will listen to the people - not the special interests - and get immigration numbers under control, as the voters have demanded."

https://www.donaldjtrump.com/press-releases/donald-j.-trump-statement-on-immigration

HAPPY2BME

  • Guest
61 Million Immigrants and Their Young Children Now Live in the United States

Three-fourths are legal immigrants and their children


Center For Immigration Studies
By Steven A. Camarota March 2016

A new analysis of government data from December 2015 indicates that more than 61 million immigrants and their American-born children under age 18 now live in the United States; roughly three-fourths (45.3 million) are legal immigrants and their children. While the national debate has focused on illegal immigration, the enormous impact of immigration is largely the result of those brought in legally. These numbers raise profound questions that are seldom asked: What number of immigrants can be assimilated? What is the absorption capacity of our nation's schools, health care system, infrastructure, and, perhaps most importantly, its labor market? What is the impact on the environment and quality of life from significantly increasing the nation's population size and density? With some 45 million legal immigrants and their young children already here, should we continue to admit a million new legal permanent immigrants every year?

Among the findings of this analysis:

    In December 2015 there were 61 million immigrants (legal and illegal) and U.S.-born children under age 18 with at least one immigrant parent living in the United States.

    Immigrants allowed into the country legally and their children account for three-fourths (45.3 million) of all immigrants and their children.

    Almost one in five U.S. residents is now an immigrant or minor child of an immigrant parent.

    The numbers represent a complete break with the recent history of the United States. As recently as 1970, there were only 13.5 million immigrants and their young children in the country, accounting for one in 15 U.S. residents.

    Just since 2000, the number of immigrants and their children has increased by 18.4 million.

    The number of immigrants and their young children grew six times faster than the nation's total population from 1970 to 2015 — 353 percent vs. 59 percent.

    In many states the increase in the number of immigrants and their minor children from 1970 to 2015 has been nothing short of astonishing:

        In Georgia, this population grew 3,058 percent (from 55,000 to 1.75 million), 25 times faster than the overall state population.

        In Nevada, this population grew 3,002 percent (from 26,000 to 821,000), six times faster than the overall state population.

        In North Carolina, this population grew 2,937 percent (from 47,000 to 1.43 million), 30 times faster than the overall state population.

        In Arkansas, this population grew 1,831 percent (from 12,000 to 228,000), 34 times faster than the overall state population.

        In Tennessee, this population grew 1,823 percent (from 28,000 to 537,000), 27 times faster than the overall state population.

        In Virginia, this population grew 1,150 percent (from 114,000 to 1.42 million), 15 times faster than the overall state population.

        In Oklahoma, this population grew 1,139 percent (from 37,000 to 458,000), 22 times faster than the overall state population.

        In Texas, this population grew 1,084 percent (from 582,000 to 6.89 million), 7 times faster than the overall state population.

        In Arizona, this population grew 1,019 percent (from 131,000 to 1.46 million), four times faster than the overall state population.

Data and Methods

Immigrants and Their Children in 2015. To estimate the size of the immigrant population (legal and illegal) in December 2015, we use the Current Population Survey (CPS) collected by the Census Bureau each month for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The public-use file of the CPS from December 2015 shows 42.628 million immigrants (referred to as the foreign-born by the Census Bureau) in the United States.1 The December 2015 survey also shows 16.255 million children under age 18 with at least one foreign-born parent, for a total of 58.883 million immigrants and their minor children in the country.2

While the monthly CPS is the nation's primary source of information on the nation's labor force, it does not fully capture the foreign-born population. The yearly American Community Survey (ACS) is a much larger survey with somewhat better coverage of the population than the CPS.3 The ACS is weighted to reflect the entire U.S. population in July of each year. Unfortunately, the ACS is only released once a year, typically in the October following the calendar year of the survey; so data for 2015 will not be available for many months. The ACS also does not ask about parents' place of birth, so it is not possible to use the survey to directly measure the number of children with immigrant parents. In contrast, the CPS is usually released only a few days or weeks after it is collected. In recent years the ACS has shown an immigrant population that is 4.5 percent larger than in the CPS.4 The U.S.-born population in recent years has averaged 1.34 percent larger in the ACS than in the CPS.5

If we adjust upward the December 2015 CPS to reflect the ACS, there were a total of 61.02 million immigrants and their minor children in the United States at the end of 2015.6 This equals 18.9 percent of the nation's total population, or roughly one out of every five U.S. residents in December of last year. It may be worth noting that if we do not adjust the December 2015 CPS to reflect the ACS, then immigrants and their minor children are 18.6 percent of the population.

While there remains significant undercount of immigrants in the ACS, we do not adjust for the undercount of immigrants in Census data. Instead, we simply adjust the CPS to reflect the ACS. This allows us to compare figures for December 2015 with Census Bureau data from 2000 and 1970, both of which are also not adjusted for undercount. Nonetheless, the Department of Homeland Security has estimated that 1.85 million immigrants are missed in the ACS.7 Thus it is likely that the actual number of immigrants and their children is closer to 63 million.

Immigrants and Their Children in 2000. The ACS was not fully implemented in 2000, so to estimate the number of immigrants we use the 2000 Census. The 2000 Census was the last census to identify the foreign-born — the 2010 Census did not include this question. The 2000 Census showed 31.108 million immigrants in the country. But the 2000 Census did not include a question on the birthplace of parents, so it is necessary to use the CPS from 2000 to estimate the number of children with immigrant parents.8 In total, there were 42.580 million immigrants and their children under age 18 in the country in 2000. 9

Immigrants and Their Children in 1970. The 1970 Census was the last census to ask about parents' place of birth. We use it to estimate the number of immigrants and their children in that year. Since the CPS did not include questions on parents' place of birth until 1994, and the 1980 and 1990 censuses also did not include the question, there is no straightforward way to estimate the number of immigrants and their children in 1980 or 1990. The 1970 Census shows 13.462 million immigrants and U.S.-born children under age 18 with at least one immigrant parent in the country.

Illegal Immigrants and Their Children. Almost all estimates of the illegal immigrant population in the United States are based on Census Bureau data, typically the ACS or CPS. Using the ACS, the Center for Migration Studies (CMS) recently estimated 10.9 million illegal immigrants in the country in 2014. CMS assumes an undercount in Census Bureau data of 7.5 percent, implying 10.1 million illegal immigrants in Census Bureau data in 2014.10 The Pew Research Center also bases its estimates on Census Bureau data and estimates an illegal immigrant population of 11.3 million in 2014.11 It is not entirely clear what undercount adjustment Pew used for their 2014 estimate. But they do state in prior analyses that through 2012 the undercount was 5 to 7 percent, implying that about 10.6 million illegal immigrants are in the 2014 data.12 The Department of Homeland Security 2012 estimate of illegal immigrants, the most recent it has published, shows a total illegal population of 11.43 million in 2012, with 1.14 million illegal immigrants missed by the ACS, implying an illegal population of 10.3 million in the data.13 Unless there was a dramatic growth in the illegal population in the last few years, there must be 10 to 11 million illegal immigrants in the December 2015 CPS after adjusting to reflect the ACS. In the discussion that follows, we assume 10.6 million are in the data.

The Pew Research Center has estimated that in 2012 there were 4.5 million U.S.-born children under age 18 living with an illegal immigrant parent.14 Although most researchers think the illegal population has been roughly stable in the last few years, the number of children of illegals has grown. While fertility has fallen significantly among foreign-born Hispanics, there were still roughly 900,000 births from 2012 to 2015 among illegal immigrants in the United States.15 However, births to illegal immigrants are offset each year by a small number of deaths, those who leave the country with their illegal immigrant parents, those who turn 18 each year, and those whose parents are awarded legal status.16

Our best estimate is that in 2015 there were 5.1 million children with at least one illegal immigrant parent. Taken together, the best available evidence indicates that there were a total of 15.7 million illegal immigrants and their U.S.-born children in the adjusted December 2015 CPS, accounting for 25.7 percent of the 61 million immigrants and their children in the country. This also means that there are 45.3 million legal immigrants and their U.S.-born children under age 18 in the country. While there is always some error when estimating illegal immigration, there is no question that about three-quarters of immigrants and their young children in the country in December 2015 are either legal immigrants or the minor children of legal immigrants.





http://cis.org/61-Million-Immigrants-and-Their-Young-Children-Now-Live-in-the-United-States
« Last Edit: March 08, 2016, 06:15:41 am by HAPPY2BME »

Offline Frank Cannon

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 26,097
  • Gender: Male
What does Donny think about this immigrant? Wants to send her back I'll bet....

[
« Last Edit: March 08, 2016, 07:19:34 am by Repub4Trumsich »

HAPPY2BME

  • Guest
What does Donny think about this immigrant? Wants to send her back I'll bet....



===================================

Frustrated Frank? 

What's really on your mind?
« Last Edit: March 08, 2016, 07:20:02 am by Repub4Trumsich »

Offline R4 TrumPence

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 13,231
  • Gender: Female
I know those were pics of Melania, but they had nothing to do with this topic.
Also we are not a tabloid site exploiting her immigration status.
If you have seen her interviews, she tells how long it took her to get her citizenship!


I am Repub4Bush on FR '02