Sentences with phrase «thought by immigration»

Not exact matches

Think about the public calls by Facebook (FB) and Google (GOOG) for looser immigration standards — or companies like Apple (AAPL) offshoring jobs and then requesting that the government give them tax breaks to repatriate income.
Another group, represented by Arkansas congressman Tom Cotton, think the bill does too little to choke off future illegal immigration.
DREAM Act - type laws aside, immigration policy won't result in any major Republican gains among nonwhites by itself, and waiting a couple of months to think things through won't hurt.
It is, of course, impossible to know his heart, though not altogether impossible to know his mind, and it is telling that on what are perhaps the three most crucial international policy issues facing the next president «the Arab world, Iran, and illegal immigration «Gingrich's positions appear to have been shaped significantly by Catholic thought.
By this way of thinking, immigration is a matter of basic human rights and thus transcends the political.
Conservatives are by no means united on the immigration question, and for a while it was thought that this could occasion a split that would jeopardize what appears to be the conservative political ascendancy.
There are some excellent ways to do this: by 41 % to 22 %, British people think that immigration has a positive impact on the economy; by 53 % to 17 %, they agree that immigrants work hard and make a contribution to Britain; and by 62 % to 15 %, they think that under a well - managed system, immigration can be good for Britain.
«John Denham has blown apart Ed Miliband's so - called apology for immigration under Labour by revealing what Labour really think,» he said.
«UK immigration officials have been on the receiving end of a four - letter outburst by former Home Office minister», the hon. Member for Slough, who «told a conference of a Labour think tank that the job could corrupt «even quite good and moral» people.»
She added that a group of about 10 - 12 people who claimed to be coming to Ghana for a church programme were returned by immigration officers who thought their movement was suspicious.
I thought it was weird but she went with her and suddenly she was grabbed by about 15 immigration officers.
On - topic questions included the timing of the effectiveness of the laws signed today and when ICE will close it's office on Rikers Island, how many people currently on Rikers Island will be covered by these laws, details of Carlos Rodriguez (who was held on Rikers Island for eight months on an ICE detainer) path to this country and his thoughts during his eight month detention, what Mayor de Blasio would like to see the federal government do about immigration and what he will do absent such action, what he would tell Republicans who think his approach is a dangerous precedent, de Blasio and Melissa Mark - Viverito's positions on municipal IDs and voting rights for non-citizens, the number of people arrested on misdemeanors and then subject to ICE detainers and whether persons arrested on felony charges must first go through the justice system before being subject to an ICE detainer.
Not because it would lead to a re-run of the immigration - dominated 2005 campaign (as argued in the Sunday Telegraph by my old friend Peter Oborne, who, not for the first time, has come to the right conclusion but for the wrong reason), but because I do not think he is needed and would become a distracting influence.
However, a majority of young people thought the UK was either better off or not negatively affected by immigration from these countries.
NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio thinks Donald Trump made a fatal error when he criticized Ghazala Khan, whose son died during the Iraq war and who stood by her husband's side last week as he delivered a stinging rebuke of Trump's immigration policies at the Democratic National Convention.
Warsi's remarks, which reinforce criticisms made before the weekend by the former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg, who chaired the cabinet subcommittee on immigration from 2010 to 2015, undermine Rudd's insistence in her statement to the Commons last week on blaming officials for thinking about policy rather than people.
Whereas Boris traded on some of his popularity by challenging the Tory faithful on immigration, Dave was unashamed in pressing all the right - wing buttons he could think of.
Nigel Farage will want the by - election to be about Europe, immigration and welfare and the Tories will probably select a candidate and trumpet policies that they think will «appeal» to Ukip voters, not realising that it's a political dead end.
«Immigration law we know is extremely complicated, it just seems kind of incredibly unfair that what was agreed upon by the mayor and the City Council years ago and is working very effectively is now in jeopardy and he's thinking about depriving people of an attorney.»
For a start you're not questioning why working class socialist labour voters went Ukip in the first place, it wasn't some guardian reading, snobbery that the working class are think, therefore are bigoted, so they must vote UKIP as they're nasty right wingers who dint like immigration, the decrease in wages among blue collar workers, due to immigration, is by the bosses seeking immigration to pay lower wages to make themselves more profits, Appeasing implies going along with something through fear of something worse, to agree with controlling immigration, because ex labour voters are going UKIP isn't appeasing it, why would us being afraid of losing is our votes to.
I think this commitment is represented well by HGSE faculty members, including some hired during my deanship, for example: Nancy Hill with her work on parenting and family socialization practices across ethnic, socio - economic, and neighborhood contexts; Meira Levinson with her work on civic and multicultural education; Natasha Warikoo with her work on race, immigration, inequality, and culture as they relate to education; and Hiro Yoshikawa with his work on the development of young children in immigrant families.
I think about a former, Polynesian student of mine, who was completely immersed in black hip - hop culture, yet seemed worried she would offend me by saying my race out loud during a class discussion on immigration and ethnic backgrounds.
Just like real life you've also got to think about whether you've actually got enough people to run all of your buildings, a fact which can be combated by building an immigration office and encouraging more people to come and live on your island.
The thought - provoking and personal work by these contemporary artists highlight topics of violence, immigration, human rights, and -LSB-...]
Sandel will be joined by poet Elizabeth Alexander; actors Danny Burstein (Fiddler on the Roof); Brandon Victor Dixon (Hamilton); John Lithgow (The Crown); dancer, actor and recent Kennedy Center Honoree Carmen de Lavallade; immigration activist and Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Jose Antonio Vargas, and others, who will set the stage with thought - provoking readings and performances.
The US plans to impose tight quotas on the judges who hear them are ill thought out — likely by civil servants with little or no understanding of the practical challenges of working in immigration appeal and court work.
Having a masters in law, whatever the specialization is (business or not) is required in order to be an attorney - at - law, yet we think that business immigration is advantageous, because it implies true concerns of ethics and of mutual trust (with clients and with administration) that must be carried out by attorneys.
In this case, counsel for the Secretary of State referred to the fact that consideration had been given to prosecuting the Claimant for his non-cooperation under s. 35 (3) of the Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants, etc.) Act 2004: failing without reasonable excuse to comply with a requirement made by the Secretary of State to take specified action which the Secretary of State thinks will or may enable a travel document to be obtained by or for the Claimant which would facilitate the Claimant's deportation or removal from the United Kingdom.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z