Immigration report sparks British coalition row

London (AFP) – Britain’s coalition government was bitterly divided over immigration on Thursday after the Conservative minister in charge of the issue accused Business Secretary Vince Cable from the Liberal Democrats of asserting “falsehoods” about the impact of immigrant labour.

The row between Immigration Minister James Brokenshire and Cable erupted as an official government study concluded there was “relatively little evidence” that migrant workers had taken the jobs of Britons when the economy was strong.

The review said there was evidence of “some labour market displacement” during the recession.

But it also found there was little evidence that immigrants from the European Union had an impact on the employment of British workers, although it was a “relatively recent phenomenon” and “this does not imply that impacts do not occur in some circumstances”.

Cable, a leading figure in the junior coalition partners, has said he is “intensely relaxed” about mass immigration and is expected to condemn “scare stories” about the issue when he gives a speech later on Thursday.

Brokenshire, making his first speech as immigration minister, attacked Cable’s views and said the number of recent arrivals from the European Union was “just too high”.

“Mass immigration puts pressure on social cohesion, on public services and infrastructure and — yes — it can force down wages and displace local people from the job market,” he said.

“The winners are the haves like Vince, but the people who lose out are from working class families, they’re ethnic minorities and recent immigrants themselves.”

Brokenshire’s stance was viewed as an attempt to attract working-class voters who are being wooed by the anti-immigration UK Independence Party (UKIP).

Conservative ministers have frequently cited research from 2012 by the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) covering the period from 1995 to 2010 that found 23 British workers were left unemployed for every 100 new arrivals from outside the EU.

But the new analysis stated that when data from the recession years of 2009 and 2010 was omitted, the impact of non-EU migration was not “statistically significant”.

Brokenshire’s predecessor as immigration minister, Mark Harper, was forced to resign after he discovered his cleaner did not have permission to work in Britain.

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Without immigration, the U.S. economy looks like sclerotic Old Europe

Immigration boosts economic growth and makes inequality more bearable.

immigration-reform-rally-614xa

FORTUNE — As the 2014 midterm elections draw nearer, the issue of immigration reform will be used as a wedge to pressure vulnerable Republicans into either angering their base and supporting reform, or alienating key demographics.

The politics of immigration are complicated, as are the economics. Researchers are split over whether immigration brings down the wages of low-skilled workers in the U.S. But with respect to other questions, like whether immigration promotes overall economic growth, the data is clear. It overwhelmingly does.

MORE: How France learned to hate capitalism

One way to highlight this is to compare economic growth over the past 30 years in the U.S. to other wealthy countries like France, the U.K., and Japan. A stylized fact often thrown about is that the United States, over the 80 or so years in which we’ve measured this sort of thing, has consistently grown faster than other countries due to its more enthusiastic adherence to classic capitalistic principals. Check out the graph below, which shows nominal yearly GDP growth from 1982 to 2012:

US GDP Growth Chart

As you can see, the U.S. consistently beats out its wealthy peers. Over this period, nominal GDP growth in the U.S. has averaged 5.4%, compared with 1.8% in France; 2.4% in the U.K.; and 1.9% in Japan.

But one fact that often gets overlooked is that the U.S. population has been and continues to grow at a faster rate than its industrialized peers. Take a look now at GDP growth over that same period, this time on a per capita basis:

US GDP per Capita Growth Chart

US GDP per Capita Growth data by YCharts

Here, the competition is much closer. In fact, the U.S. doesn’t even win. On a per capita basis, these countries grow at:

  • 2.0% in the U.K.;
  • 1.8% in the U.S.;
  • 1.6% in Japan;
  • and 1.2% in France

Take away America’s faster population growth and there’s a lot less of a difference between its economic growth compared to its wealthy nation peers. This puts into perspective, for instance, the current debate over healthcare reform in the U.S. Britain has socialized medicine, a fact that pushes the share of yearly GDP spent by the government close to 50%, yet it has managed to grow its economy faster than the U.S. on a per-capita basis, for which government spending represents a smaller share of GDP.

So, population growth is good for economic growth. This seems intuitive — more people means more economic activity. And in the U.S., population growth is increasingly reliant on immigration. Sure, birth rates are higher in the U.S. than in other wealthy countries, but they are on the decline, and the Census bureau estimates that immigration will be the main driver of population growth within 30 years.

MORE: Russia’s laughable economic threats against the U.S.

Thomas Piketty, the French economist responsible for compiling much of the data driving today’s debate over growing wealth and income inequality, raises this issue in his forthcoming book, Capital in the 21st CenturyHe points out that immigration is also the primary reason the U.S. has, for much of its history, avoided the large and unequal concentrations of private wealth that developed in Europe. He writes:

[Immigration] was the great contribution of the United States to global redistribution: the country grew from a population of barely 3 million at the time of the Revolutionary War to more than 300 million, largely thanks to successive waves of immigration. That is why the United States is still a long way from becoming the new Old Europe … immigration is the mortar that holds the United States together, the stabilizing force that makes increasingly large inequalities of labor income politically and socially bearable … for a fair proportion of Americans in the in the bottom 50 percent of income, these inequalities are of secondary importance for the very simple reason that they were born in a less wealthy country and see themselves as being on an upward trajectory.

In other words, not only does immigration boost growth, it also combats the kind of concentration of wealth that has fueled political unrest across the developed world. Population growth doesn’t make the rich any poorer, but it does diminish the power of wealth. A million dollars is going to be a much more valuable thing to have in a country in which the population and economy are shrinking than in a country where the population and economy are growing.

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Immigration reform: Integrating the skilled

In today’s slow-to-no-growth global economy, politicians of all political persuasions understandably fear the consequences of action, not inaction. Some worry about the impact on core labor constituencies of potential competition by low-wage immigrants. Others ponder what numerous new citizens of Asian and Latino origin will mean for future presidential elections. Even in Asia, the largest source of high-skilled immigrants to the US, immigration is a contentious issue. Case in point: Japan’s ongoing reluctance to welcome immigrants despite a rapidly aging population.

Yet, in the United States, let’s not let this larger, ongoing debate – and admittedly an important one – on immigration stand in the way of making smaller-scale updates to what has been the traditional path forward for many seeking the American dream.

For skilled immigrants who were doctors, lawyers or other professionals in their countries of origin, first jobs in the United States typically take little to no advantage of their full skill-set given licensing or accreditation requirements. The anecdotes are legion and legend: the taxi driver who was once an engineer, or the nanny who had long worked as a nurse back home.

The story is as old as America. Immigrants sacrifice, and ultimately succeed in building better lives for their children, if not yet themselves. That was certainly the story shared among many in my own family as some 120 people, descendants of Chinese immigrants of many decades past, came together recently in Seattle for our first ever family reunion.

And like many a Pacific Northwest family, the occupations and preoccupations were varied: from Seattle public school teacher to Boeing engineer to my own recent service as one of the few U.S. ambassadors of Chinese heritage. (By some counts, I am the fourth, with Gary Locke, the former U.S. Ambassador to China, U.S. Commerce Secretary and Washington state governor, the fifth.)

Many in our extended family gathered again recently as we marked the recent passing in Yakima, Washington, of a great aunt, Jade Hong Chin, who immigrated to the United States in 1947 to be united with her husband Calvin after WWII had separated them.

These tales of immigrant life, of separation and of coming together, and of becoming American will not change.

But what could well change, in a bipartisan manner, is support for an effort focused on immigrant integration, separate and distinct from the contentious issue of immigrant admissions.

Addressing the ongoing “brain waste” of an estimated 1.5 million college-educated immigrants either unemployed or employed in relatively unskilled jobs also will help America better utilize the nation’s diversity of human capital. This also should not detract from the critical challenge of job creation and ensuring all Americans, regardless of immigration status, can build careers in today’s economy.

The nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute – a Washington, D.C., think tank focused on analysis of the movement of people worldwide – has in the past noted America’s uneven progress in integrating skilled immigrants. Policy implications could include a greater focus on state workforce agency partnerships and on advancing accredited work-skills training and English language programs. At the federal level, incentives could well be provided for more effective bridging programs for America’s underutilized talent.

One such program doing so, supported by World Education Services – a research organization focused on international education and credential evaluation and on whose board I sit – is aptly called “pathways to success.”

This effort includes seminars offering practical advice and resources to skilled immigrants on how to further pursue education, obtain professional licensing or certification, and find suitable employment in the United States.

Seventy years ago, last December, the United States marked the 70th anniversary of the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. That original act of Congress had singled out an ethnic group for immigration exclusion, prohibited legal Chinese immigrants from becoming naturalized citizens, and relegated them to second-class status.

Those times thankfully are behind us even though some may well raise fears about new waves of immigrants hitting the shores of an ever-changing America. In 1986, President Ronald Reagan signed a sweeping immigration reform bill into law. In 2006, President George W. Bush became the first to address the nation from the Oval Office in prime-time on immigration – a reform effort that ultimately failed.

Today, America again has the opportunity to mend a broken system, and set an example for the world. The U.S. Congress can begin small, even as it thinks big, and focus first on ensuring skilled immigrants, from Asia and elsewhere, can fully utilize their talents and education toward building an even stronger America.

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Volokh Conspiracy: Assessing immigration policy as if immigrants were people too

Volokh Conspiracy: Assessing immigration policy as if immigrants were people too
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Immigration policy must change, says Liam Fox

Without a “clearer narrative” on immigration, the Conservatives would not win
back enough voters from Ukip to achieve a Commons majority, he warned.

The Tory leadership has privately conceded that Mr Cameron has no hope of
winning more seats than Mr Farage in the European Parliament elections in
May.

Many inside the party also fear that there is no chance of Mr Cameron now
delivering on his promise to reduce net migration to the “tens of
thousands”, after figures showed the number of immigrants rose last year.

Dr Fox made the comments as a leaked letter emerged in which the leader of 34
Tory councillors in Guildford accused Mr Cameron of undermining the party’s
chances of winning the next election.

Stephen Mansbridge told Mr Cameron that the Tories were being “placed in an
impossible electoral position through your government’s policies”. The
letter was backed by councillors and was being passed to No 10 by Anne
Milton, a local MP and government whip.

At the same time, Eurosceptic MPs warned that the Prime Minister’s
“vacillation and procrastination” on whether to adopt a tougher
anti-European policy would allow Ukip to take votes from Tories.

Bill Cash, who chairs the Commons EU scrutiny committee, said this could cost
the party “50 or 60 marginal seats”.

Dr Fox, who was Mr Cameron’s first defence secretary, issued his strongest
warning yet to the Prime Minister that a radical change of direction was
needed.

He said that “current betting” suggested that Ukip were favourites in the
European polls on May 22.

“If they do well, many will point to the successes of previous minor parties
that did well in the Euro elections only to fail at the next general
election. This could be dangerous complacency, especially for the Tories,”
he said.

The Tory response must not be to attempt to outflank Ukip from the Right, the
former Cabinet minister writes.

“The correct response is to set out a positive vision, clear philosophy, and
definable objectives,” Dr Fox said.

In particular, he calls for a radical new policy on immigration, moving away
from the party pledge to cut net migration to the tens of thousands by next
year, which looks ever more impossible to meet.

Figures last week showed that net migration rose by 58,000 to 212,000 in the
12 months to last September, with the increase due to more workers from the
EU.

Dr Fox said Tories should win back voters who have switched allegiance by
pointing out the “unavoidable consequences” of a vote for Ukip.

“If the Tories are to bring back enough of these voters to win an overall
majority at the election, then there needs to be a clearer narrative on
immigration, stressing not only the need to restrict numbers, but also to
determine which individuals, with what skills, enter our country.

“While Conservative policy has concentrated on getting down the net migration
numbers, it is actual numbers that affect school places, housing and health.
The Conservatives must ditch this statistical nonsense.”

In what will be seen as a coded criticism of the Prime Minister and his
allies, Dr Fox calls for an end to the “name-calling” and the accusations
that Ukip activists are “cranks” or “crackpots”.

Mr Cameron famously described Ukip as a party of “fruitcakes, loonies and
closet racists”.

Mr Cameron is also facing growing concern over the rise of Ukip from
grass-roots activists outside Westminster.

In a letter to him, the leader of Guildford council said he feared the borough
would lose its Tory majority for the first time in 12 years and that Mrs
Milton would be defeated at the election.

Stephen Mansbridge said there was huge local opposition to the “excessive
number of new homes” being forced on the area’s green belt by government
policy.

“We have lost many Conservative party members — indeed whole branches of the
local association — due to various government policies, and Ukip won over 20
per cent of the vote in the local elections last year in Surrey,” he said.
“Immigration, the EU and gay marriage are frequently given as reasons for
this.”

The Conservatives’ manifesto for the European polls will be largely a
restatement of existing plans, including the promise of a referendum in 2017
on Britain’s membership of the EU.

The party has shelved plans to make reform of human-rights law the centrepiece
of the European election campaign because senior figures regard this as a
waste of a potentially popular reform.

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Immigration advocates go hungry to send message to Washington

ImageImage

L.E. Baskow

Supporters with Fast for Families rally with their speakers during a media stop in downtown Henderson as part of a nationwide bus tour Friday, Feb. 28, 2014. L.E. Baskow

Friday, Feb. 28, 2014 | 7:24 p.m.

Fast for Families, a national campaign advocating for immigration reform, visited Southern Nevada on Friday, picking up fellow hunger strikers and proponents for congressional action along the way.

In November, Fast for Families sought to catalyze the immigration debate when Eliseo Medina of the Service Employees International Union, Dae Joong “DJ” Yoon of the National Korean American Service & Education Consortium, Rudy Lopez of the Fair Immigration Reform Movement and Cristian Avila of Mi Familia Vota participated in a hunger strike on the National Mall, abstaining from all nourishment except for water, for 22 days.

Avila spoke at a press conference Friday morning across the street from the Henderson Detention Center, the main facility in Nevada for housing immigrants detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“Inaction is not an option,” he said. “There were a lot of ups and downs in 2013 for the movement. It was like a roller coaster. The fast created a lot of momentum, and we are building on that momentum with the bus tour. Congress will get the message, from community after community, people are committed to seeing reform happen.”

Avila, 23, has received a work permit under the deferred action for childhood arrivals program, but his parents are still living in the country illegally. He said the 26 pounds he lost during the winter fast were nothing compared with the sacrifice his parents and others have made in search of a better life for their children.

Immigration reform was dubbed a top priority by the Obama administration after the 2012 election. And a bill addressing border security, guest workers, high-skilled labor and the estimated 11 million immigrants living in the country illegally did pass the Senate the following June, but stalled in the House.

Early this year, House Republicans released a set of guiding principles for an immigration debate, but House Speaker John Boehner later said reform was unlikely until President Barack Obama restored “trust” with Republicans over his ability to enforce the laws.

Little movement has been seen in Congress since then, but advocates across the country continue to push. On Wednesday, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce sent a letter to Boehner, signed by 246 businesses and organizations, urging action. Among those signing on were the Las Vegas and Reno Chambers of Commerce.

Fast for Families plans to visit 75 different congressional districts before reaching Washington, D.C., in April. The tour, while seeking to influence lawmakers, is also an effort to spread awareness of the impact of deportations on families facing long-term separation.

“Our families are being separated every single day … We’re not going to be silenced by being told that we will get a vote eventually,” said Astrid Silva, a local immigration reform advocate from the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada. “We need a vote for our families.”

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported 368,644 people in fiscal year 2013, down approximately 10 percent from 2012.

Avila and others from the group met with the staff of Joe Heck, R-Nev., on Friday, and asked the congressman be a leader in bringing immigration reform to a vote in the House.

Avila stopped short of asking for an administrative halt to deportations while Congress debates reforming the system.

“Immigration reform has to get done, and the ball is in Congress’ court,” he said. “What we need is a permanent solution, and administrative moves that have a termination or deadline only go so far.”

Fast for Families is asking supporters to fast one day a week, every Wednesday, between March 5 and April 9, in solidarity with the campaign.

In Southern Nevada, 30 teachers from the Clark County School District have agreed to join the fast, Rudy Zamora of Mi Familia Vota said.

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Boulder immigration attorney Emily Cohen facing theft charges, suspension

A Boulder immigration lawyer is facing felony theft charges and a possible suspension of her license after Boulder County prosecutors say she scammed several families out of thousands of dollars.

An arrest warrant was issued Thursday for the arrest of Emily Cohen, 34, on suspicion of five counts of theft of $1,000 to $20,000 and theft of $2,000 to $5,000.

According to the arrest affidavit, Cohen collected fees from seven immigrant families to secure visas and work permits and then dropped out of contact without ever delivering on the documents.

Cohen allegedly collected $41,320 in fees from the seven families, with one family paying Cohen as much as $13,000 according to the affidavit.

Investigators say in some of the cases Cohen — who spoke fluent Spanish — refused to provide the families who could not read English with a Spanish-language copy of their contracts. After an initial meeting in person with Cohen during which she would tell the families she could help them secure the documents, Cohen would lay out a payment plan for them.

The families told investigators they made cash payments to receptionists at one of Cohen’s two Boulder offices but rarely saw Cohen or got receipts for the payments. They said Cohen ignored their phone calls and stopped showing up to court for the families with court cases even after the payments were completed.

The arrest affidavit and Cohen’s online site list Emily Cohen law as having offices at 4450 Arapahoe Ave. and 1942 Broadway.

The arrest warrant carries a bond of $10,000.

The affidavit indicated attorney Stephen Louth contacted investigators and informed them he would be representing Cohen. Louth did not immediately return calls for comment Friday morning.

In addition to the theft charges, Cohen is also facing suspension after the Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel filed a motion on Feb. 14 with the Office of the Presiding Disciplinary Judge to have her immediately suspended for causing “immediate and substantial private harm” and converting client funds.

The complaints allege that Cohen also collected fees but failed to deliver services to several other clients who were not named as victims in the Boulder County arrest affidavit.

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Immigration rally to be held at Boehner's office

WEST CHESTER, Ohio — Immigration reform supporters are set to protest outside of House Speak John Boehner’s office in West Chester on Friday.

Members of Organizing for Action are calling on Boehner to push for comprehensive immigration reform in the House of Representatives.

The protesters will gather outside Boehner’s office at 7969 Cincinnati-Dayton Road from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.

The organization said immigration reform would be good for the nation’s families and economy.

This is not the first time that protesters have targeted Boehner’s office.

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Immigration rally planned at John Boehner’s Springfield, Ohio office

A coalition of civil rights activists, labor leaders and religious leaders held a rally outside Boehner’s Springfield office in July 2013.

At the time, Boehner and other Republican leaders in the House said they were deciding on how to move forward after the Senate passed a comprehensive bill that included a path to citizenship for 11 million people already living in the country illegally.

Now it appears unlikely that any major legislation will be done ahead of the 2014 election.

According to recent Associated Press reports, lawmakers have all but wrapped up their most consequential work ahead of the election.

“We’ve got a lot of things on our plate,” Boehner told the AP in an earlier interview. However, he predicted there would be no breakthrough accomplishments on immigration, taxes or any other area.

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Immigration focus for UKIP's Gill








Nathan GillNathan Gill is top of UKIP’s list of candidates in Wales


UKIP’s lead Welsh candidate will focus on European immigration and red tape in his speech to the party’s national conference today.

Using the conference as a launchpad for the forthcoming European election, Nathan Gill will say UKIP’s ambition is to top the poll in Wales.

He will also emphasise UKIP as the only Welsh party in May’s poll urging withdrawal from the European Union.

UKIP leader Nigel Farage will also address the gathering in Torquay.

The party won its first Welsh seat in the last European election in 2009.

A recent ITV Cymru/You Gov opinion poll shows UKIP in second place behind Labour. If that were translated into the election result, UKIP would retain its seat.

However, in a speech this afternoon to UKIP’s national conference, Mr Gill will say the party’s ambition is to win the election in Wales.


‘Positive vision’

Mr Gill will argue that voters “are ready for change and are fed up of the tired old parties”.

Highlighting UKIP’s “positive vision for Wales and the UK outside the European Union”, he will say the party’s election campaign will focus on concerns about EU immigration and regulations.



















Nathan Gill

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BBC Wales’ annual St David’s Day opinion poll shows 60% of Welsh voters thought immigration to the UK was too high, with only 31% saying the level was “about right”.

But the survey, carried out by pollsters ICM, also shows more than half of respondents would like the UK to remain as part of the EU – 54% wanting to stay and 40% wanting to pull out.

Mr Gill secured UKIP’s best result in a Welsh assembly seat in the 2013 Ynys Mon by-election – pushing Labour close for second place.

He will say UKIP has continued its development in Wales by doubling membership of the party in the past year.

Its conference in Torquay on Friday will be followed by a public meeting and action day on Saturday.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-26375777
Immigration focus for UKIP's Gill
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Immigration focus for UKIP's Gill








Nathan GillNathan Gill is top of UKIP’s list of candidates in Wales


UKIP’s lead Welsh candidate will focus on European immigration and red tape in his speech to the party’s national conference today.

Using the conference as a launchpad for the forthcoming European election, Nathan Gill will say UKIP’s ambition is to top the poll in Wales.

He will also emphasise UKIP as the only Welsh party in May’s poll urging withdrawal from the European Union.

UKIP leader Nigel Farage will also address the gathering in Torquay.

The party won its first Welsh seat in the last European election in 2009.

A recent ITV Cymru/You Gov opinion poll shows UKIP in second place behind Labour. If that were translated into the election result, UKIP would retain its seat.

However, in a speech this afternoon to UKIP’s national conference, Mr Gill will say the party’s ambition is to win the election in Wales.


‘Positive vision’

Mr Gill will argue that voters “are ready for change and are fed up of the tired old parties”.

Highlighting UKIP’s “positive vision for Wales and the UK outside the European Union”, he will say the party’s election campaign will focus on concerns about EU immigration and regulations.



















Nathan Gill

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BBC Wales’ annual St David’s Day opinion poll shows 60% of Welsh voters thought immigration to the UK was too high, with only 31% saying the level was “about right”.

But the survey, carried out by pollsters ICM, also shows more than half of respondents would like the UK to remain as part of the EU – 54% wanting to stay and 40% wanting to pull out.

Mr Gill secured UKIP’s best result in a Welsh assembly seat in the 2013 Ynys Mon by-election – pushing Labour close for second place.

He will say UKIP has continued its development in Wales by doubling membership of the party in the past year.

Its conference in Torquay on Friday will be followed by a public meeting and action day on Saturday.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-26375777
Immigration focus for UKIP's Gill
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