She got her job because her predecessor failed to convince voters to accept
high immigration in exchange for prosperity.
Not exact matches
Cisco values a diverse and inclusive environment and believes
in an effective
high - skilled
immigration system.»
The estimate
in Silicon Valley is that the number jumps
higher to like 50 %, so anyone who talks about shutting down
immigration should have their head examined.
Lo Voi told a news conference
in Palermo that the probe helped investigators to «reach a
higher level
in the fight against clandestine
immigration.»
Immigration experts have also chimed in, arguing that more aggressive immigration enforcement, not to mention the construction of a border wall, will not dissuade people from entering the US illegally — it instead perpetuates a black market in which risky smuggling operations are placed in h
Immigration experts have also chimed
in, arguing that more aggressive
immigration enforcement, not to mention the construction of a border wall, will not dissuade people from entering the US illegally — it instead perpetuates a black market in which risky smuggling operations are placed in h
immigration enforcement, not to mention the construction of a border wall, will not dissuade people from entering the US illegally — it instead perpetuates a black market
in which risky smuggling operations are placed
in high demand.
Many of the counties with the
highest net
immigration relative to their 2016 population come as no surprise — counties
in and around the big cities
in the Northeast,
in South Florida, and along the Texas border all saw a large amount of population growth from
immigration.
One major catalyst for the referendum was U.K. citizens» fears that
high immigration was fueled by the right to free movement of people throughout the EU, which is entrenched
in European law.
A 2013 analysis of the Senate's
immigration reform bill by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates its passage would have resulted
in nine million more people entering the U.S. work force
in the next 20 years, with new immigrants participating at a
higher rate, on average, than other U.S. residents.
Swad says he never meant to get caught up
in the
immigration debate, but he enjoys Pizza Patrón's
higher profile.
«Following the election, the positive shift
in sentiment among investors, business, and consumers suggested that the probability of tax cuts and easier regulation was seen to be
higher than the probability of meaningful restrictions to trade and
immigration.
Last week, U.K. Home Secretary Theresa May gave a speech at the Conservative Party conference
in which she said that, «When
immigration is too
high, when the pace of change is too fast, it's impossible to build a cohesive society.»
U.K. based think tank Migration Watch says, however, that for the U.K.
immigration is currently, «neither sustainable nor well managed,» and that «
High net migration has resulted
in rapid population growth.»
With the entire House on next year's ballot — and about one - third of the U.S. Senate up for a vote, too — the stakes are
high for those
in the Bay Area who seek to erode the GOP's control of Congress and erect a new bulwark against Trump's agenda
in areas like
immigration and climate change.
We've increased
immigration levels from 200,000 to 300,000 and a new global skills strategy that will help streamline more talent from abroad,
high - end and
in - demand talent to help companies grow.
But at the film screening
in San Francisco early August, Zuckerberg said that U.S.
immigration policy extends far beyond foreign
high - tech workers and an increase
in H - 1B visas.
H - 1B visas are intended for foreign nationals
in «specialty» occupations that generally require
higher education, which according to U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS) includes, but is not limited to, scientists, engineers or computer programmers.
Declining wages and inequality are sometimes described as an inevitable, deterministic outcome of abstract economic forces, but none of the usual suspects seem to adequately explain what's happening to airline jobs
in the US — not
immigration (pilots and flight attendants must speak English), globalization (so - called cabotage laws have limited the scope of international outsourcing), automation (robots haven't yet displaced pilots), or the decline of unions (union density remains
high).
For example, the first post-independent
Immigration Act in 1959 restricted immigration to higher - skilled
Immigration Act
in 1959 restricted
immigration to higher - skilled
immigration to
higher - skilled candidates.
Western allies press Trump to maintain nuclear deal with Iran: Reuters US intelligence monitors Iranian cargo shipments into Syria: CNN A trade war is a major risk for China's debt - ridden economy: CNBC Federal judge orders gov» t must accept new DACA
immigration applications: WaPo Unification of Koreas still unlikely as leaders prepare to meet: Reuters US Consumer Confidence Index rebounded
in April after March decline: CB New home sales
in US increased to 4 - month
high in March: MarketWatch Richmond Fed Mfg Index turns negative for first time since 2016: Bond Buyer S&P Case - Shiller Home Price Index surged
in Feb, up 6.3 % y - o - y: CNBC Federal Housing Finance Agency: US house prices continued to rise
in Feb: HW Corp bonds with lowest investment - grade rating look vulnerable: Bloomberg 10 - year Treasury yield reaches 3.0 % for first time since 2014: CNN Money
Elaine Hung, vice-president of marketing for Sotheby's International Realty Canada, said low interest rates,
high levels of
immigration and a limited supply of homes heated up the
high - end housing markets
in Toronto and Vancouver.
«Following the election, the positive shift
in sentiment among investors, business, and consumers suggested that the probability of tax cuts and easier regulation was seen to be
higher than the probability of meaningful restrictions to trade and
immigration,» Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists led by Alec Phillips wrote
in note published late last week.
You're right.I've been
in this business over 30 years and have seen advice for the past several years that our market is ready for a correction; but as long as we have
high immigration with many wealthy buyers it won't happen.
Declining wages and inequality are sometimes described as an inevitable, deterministic outcome of abstract economic forces, but none of the usual suspects seem to adequately explain what's happening to airline jobs
in the U.S. — not
immigration (pilots and flight attendants must speak English), globalization (so - called cabotage laws have limited the scope of international outsourcing), automation (robots haven't yet displaced pilots), or the decline of unions (union density remains
high).
Opposing the existence of «a permanent underclass of Americans exploited
in America» should be our
highest priority
in immigration policy.
Cruz could be the candidate who wants to favor
high - skill and English - proficient workers
in future
immigration.
This means limiting future
immigration in that sector — the low - skilled sector — of the economy where unemployment is
high and wages have been stagnant for a generation for the sake of the low - skill workers themselves.
Consider a partial list of developments since just World War II: a broad national decline
in denominational loyalty, changes
in ethnic identity as hyphenated Americans enter the third and subsequent generations after
immigration, the great explosion
in the number of competing secular colleges and universities, the professionalization of academic disciplines with concomitant professional formation of faculty members during graduate education, the dramatic rise
in the percentage of the population who seek
higher education, the sharp trend toward seeing education largely
in vocational and economic terms, the rise
in government regulation and financing, the great increase
in the complexity and cost of
higher education, the development of a more litigious society, the legal end of
in loco parentis, an exponential and accelerating growth
in human knowledge, and so on.
Now this doesn't mean that the Republicans should do NOTHING on
immigration, but it does mean that their economic agenda should focus on issues that would help people
in the two middle quartiles (and the last quartile) get what Reihan Salam called «the basics of a dignified middle - class life — affordable
high - quality medical care, education, and housing» With that
in mind, here is a partial (and I'm not sure totally compatible) list of policies that Republicans should be looking at:
It is the result of massive migration
in the post-World War II period, which
in turn has had a variety of causes: economic and political pressures
in the countries from which the migrants came, labor shortages and an easing of
immigration barriers
in the countries to which they moved, and
in the latter countries probably also an easing of the prejudices that had
in the past resulted
in high barriers (though arguably this new tolerance could turn out to be a temporary phenomenon).
We should steer future
immigration in the direction of
higher - skills (where there appears to be a tighter labor market) and reduce future low - skill
immigration.
These forces are the stuff of everyday life: rates of birth
higher for Mexicans and Mexican - Americans than for most other ethnic groups; a chain of entirely legal
immigration, as Mexican - Americans bestow residency and citizenship on their spouses, children and parents; and a practice of illegal
immigration that is,
in the vast majority of instances, born from ordinary people exercising common sense.
Massive 3rd world
immigration combined with
high non-White birth rates = Britain is doomed
in 40 years or less.
It could mean focusing on how reductions to future low - skill
immigration also benefits our current population of foreign - born workers by restraining labor market competition
in a sector of the economy where unemployment is
high and wages have been stagnant.
A number of
high profile evangelical groups have promoted
immigration reform
in recent years, including the National Association of Evangelicals and the National Latino Evangelical Coalition.
As such, I've developed recipes from all over the world, highlighting the unique ancestral makeup of the US population (and giving similar consideration for readers living
in countries with historically
high immigration, like Canada and Australia).
Higher numbers of silver perch were found
in 2017, and this is likely due to
immigration from the Murray River.
Coffee and
immigration talks about the connection between the coffee crisis and people abandoning their farms and heading for the U.S. border... another example of how helping to improve living conditions
in source countries (by paying a fair price for
high - quality coffee) is beneficial
in many ways.
Brazil has a remarkable 1,210 expatriate footballers playing
in countries around the world with 219 playing
in Portugal which has the most relaxed
immigration laws and is seen as having the
highest potential for a big money move into one of Europe's Big 5 laws.
Please join us for
Immigration Rights Information Night on Wednesday, March 28th from 5:30 — 7:00 p.m.
in the cafeteria at Burlington
High School.
Labour are
in favour of immigrants, he assured us (as long as they're famous ones from history) but against
immigration itself, which might be too
high, but then again might not be.
«Our report clearly demonstrates that the
highest levels of
immigration in our history have been deliberately encouraged without proper consideration of its consequences,» said Migrationwatch chairman Andrew Green.
I will refer
in particular to three criticisms highlighted
in the report: the slowness to remove foreign national prisoners from the UK, the concern with the
high rate of appeals brought against UKBA's decisions which are decided against the Agency, and the large number of unresolved
immigration cases still awaiting decision.
This figure is based on the assumption that British born individuals» labour is more highly valued (and so is priced at a
higher value), and takes into consideration regional distribution and variation
in immigration across the UK.
Over the last several months, Cuomo has been critical of Trump's policies on
immigration and the tax law approved
in December that caps state and local tax deductions at $ 10,000 — a move seen as hindering
high - tax states like New York.
Corbyn has been criticised for a round of
high profile appearances on Good Morning Britain and the Radio 4 Today programme
in which he appeared to waver on what Labour's position is on
immigration.
Yet, EU expansion has resulted
in what the political scientist Geoff Evans describes as levels of
immigration which are by historical British standards «exceptionally
high».
This has given rise to the widely held assumption that problems of service delivery
in healthcare and education are related to
high immigration from other EU states.
What emerges is that with each wave respondents thought that levels of
immigration are getting
higher, a situation unlikely to arise
in relative short period of 3 month between each wave.
In fact this year, despite the high immigration into the state of New York, we actually lost people in the state of New Yor
In fact this year, despite the
high immigration into the state of New York, we actually lost people
in the state of New Yor
in the state of New York.
The MPs, two of the most influential politicians
in the
immigration debate, suggest that draconian action should now be considered «during periods of
high unemployment» — such as now — to protect low - skilled British workers struggling to compete with foreigners for jobs.»