First, my data-less narrative to expose my biases. I feel voters pretty much only care about the economy and the immigrants = more job competition plus others = change = scary message sells itself. I think immigration is a convenient talking point to rile people up about something with minimal real (and positive anyway) impact in order to divert attention from more important issues. I feel similarly about attempts to restrict LGBTQ rights and, ugh, bathroom issues. I firmly believe in a rising tide lifting all boats when the tide is accumulating relative talent at a national level and that population maintenance will require immigration including competition for immigrants soon. I could buy an argument that behind the scenes democratic leadership thought Trump would lead to lower immigration so they want to get more people in the door while they could.
But these discussions should be grounded in data. I know very little about this including veracity of the sources below. Most of them agreed with other search results, but I'm highlighting I am not qualified to google the exact right things.
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Do we care about chaos, line jumping, asylum abuse? A priori I hardly care at all about how these processes work when picking a national candidate to vote for. Obviously better/fairer is better. Empathy plays very little role in my pro-immigration stance.
After looking, I see this in the data:
Asylee cases filed per year jumped from 63k in 2021 to 456k in 2023. Refugee admissions from 11k to 60k. I may be missing something. We can't be too up in arms about something involving fairness & processes of 0.15% of the population? I get it for people in CA, Florida, and TX, but every damn ad in Colorado was about the border.
(first 2 are PDFs)
https://ohss.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/2024-10/2024_1002_ohss_asylees_fy2023.pdfhttps://ohss.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/2024-11/2024_1108_ohss_refugee_annual_flow_report_2023.pdfhttps://trac.syr.edu/reports/705/#:~:text=A%20decade%20later%2C%20the%20backlog,cases%20and%20now%20totals%20787%2C882.<>
Illegals?
Prior: I don't care about illegal immigrants at the current numbers at all.
Data: A few estimates say 10-12 million in the US and that it is a little lower than 2008 even though 30 million more people live in the US.
https://cmsny.org/us-undocumented-population-increased-in-july-2023-warren-090624/Is 3% of the US population the right number for the country to be its best? I have no idea, but I can say with certainty it is
far too low of a number for the airtime the issue gets. That stands alone, so this is not whataboutism but instead an example of opportunity cost: Around 0.74% of adults are behind bars, 4x the rate of our peers, and another 1-1.5% are on probation. We should devote our immigration airtime or at least policy making efforts to that.
https://bjs.ojp.gov/library/publications/prisoners-2022-statistical-tableshttps://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/pie2024.htmlhttps://www.prisonpolicy.org/profiles/US.html<>
I'll run with the estimate of 14-15% foreign-born number discussed earlier in the thread. It should be considered in context with the falling birth rate in the country, the increase in average age of mothers, and birth-related mortalities. In finding the right % we should really consider many other things like labor force participation rates and changes in disposable incomes by household which I haven't looked at.
In 1910 the fertility rate (births per 1,000 women of child bearing age) was 126.8 and the crude birth rate (births per 1,000 people per year) was 30. In 2018, 59.1 and 11.6.
Mothers age at first birth in is 3 up years since 1970. Hard to weigh this in but it has a direct impact on population growth - a 40 year old with 1 kid and 1 grandkid vs a 40 year old first time mother of one 1 year old.
A counterweight is that in 1900, per 1000 births, 6-9 mothers died due to complications and 100 infants died before age 1, down to 0.1 and 7.2 by the year 2000. I couldn't immediately find death before adulthood nor verify sources, but deaths before age 5 went from 238 to 10.
An interesting this is that most of this data is by mother and then compared against population. I didn't immediately see any meaningful differences of % of sex in the population over time. I did see this fun chart that is really hard to read but fun to watch, including seeing how the population changes over time (press play on it).
https://www.census.gov/dataviz/visualizations/055/I'm not immediately shockingly put off by 14-15% in that context though I have no idea what the best percentage is.
https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/nchs-births-and-general-fertility-rates-united-stateshttps://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/02news/ameriwomen.htmhttps://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4838a2.htmhttps://www.statista.com/statistics/1041693/united-states-all-time-child-mortality-rate/<>
Brain waste and who are immigrants competing with for jobs
In 2022, approximately 2.1 million college-educated immigrants in the U.S. labor market (around 20 percent of college-educated immigrants) were either unemployed or working in low-skilled jobs including as dishwashers, security guards, or taxi drivers, often because of difficulty getting their credentials recognized or other hurdles. This situation represents a waste of human capital (also referred to as “brain waste” or underemployment) that also affects approximately 7.8 million U.S.-born college graduates (16 percent of U.S.-born graduates).
https://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/college-educated-immigrants-united-statesA 4% difference doesn't seem that big. 0.8% of adults in the US.
Just for reference:
Lawyers: 1.3 million
Doctors: 1 million
Faculty: 1.5 million
Coders etc: 2 million best I can tell from various BLS job titles
https://www.americanbar.org/news/profile-legal-profession/demographics/https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/workforce/data/active-physicians-us-doctor-medicine-us-md-degree-specialty-2019https://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/indicator/csc/postsecondary-facultyAn huge proportion of H1B Visas go to tech workers in big cities
https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/research/h1b-visa-program-fact-sheetIt is nowhere near fair to compare basically any field to tech over since 2000 and gatekeeping in those fields is certainly an issue worth discussing, immigration or not. But, in tech anyway, we know most H1B visas at least are for tech jobs and the US is dominant in tech. It doesn't look like most of the rest of knowledge worker immigrants work in gatekeeper industries and most of these are knowledge fields (
https://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/college-educated-immigrants-united-states#). I guess I'm failing to see an urgent, imminent problem, and college educated democrats are taking the brunt of increased competition right? Maybe the number of jobs requiring a degree is not increasing as fast or people feel squeezed out of those jobs requiring a degree. I haven't looked at those. This isn't rejecting a perceived lack of empathy at all, and therefore strategy, but questioning the question so to speak.
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I'm even more ignorant on the farm worker angle so won't touch that. Neither will I waste breath on "not sending their best" nor "fentanyl pouring over the borders" as immigration or border issues.
I don't know the right strategy so I default to my default recommendation. Democrats should stop tip-toeing around playing nice and appeal to the right through a 'straight talking' candidate. But, ground it in data. To appeal to the right stand up and say that a majority of working immigrants take college educated people's jobs and that half of those college educated immigrants are in liberal coastal elite California, NY, NJ, VA, WA, MA, and MD (US census). Tell them that by bringing in these people we have a huge competitive advantage over other countries and that democrats are happy to take that burden. Pair that message with a tax on billionaires to give more money to public K-12 education at a federal level and (even more) money to rural white US-born people if you want.