News
A Visa Loophole as Big as a Mainframe
By Brian Grow, in Business Week, March 10, 2003
Jobs Americans Won't Do: Voodoo Economics from the White House
By Mark Krikorian, of the Center for Immigration Studies, in National Review, January 7, 2004
The 'Jobs Americans Won't Do' Myth
By Jon E. Dougherty in NewsMax, Feb. 18, 2004
Jobs Americans Won’t Do? Think Again
By Rich Lowry, editor of National Review, March 14, 2006
Dirty Work: What Are the Jobs Americans Won't Do?
By Daniel Gross, in Slate, January 12, 2007
New Immigration Ratings On All Presidential Candidates In 16 Categories
Every candidate wants voters to think he/she would end future illegal immigration. But NumbersUSA's Roy Beck finds that of 15 candidates of both parties, only six are even making promises that rate them as "good" or "excellent" on fighting future illegal immigration. Likewise, only four of these 15 are making promises that rate them as “good” or “excellent” on reducing legal immigration, which is at its highest level in history.
Before 1st Primary Votes, A Revised Look at Immigration Promises
In anticipation of the upcoming primaries and caucuses, NumbersUSA's Roy Beck continues to revise his ratings again on 14 Presidential candidates of both Parties, assessing the quality of their promises in 16 immigration categories. He finds that the media responses of the Iowa Caucus frontrunners Huckabee and Romney are not as good as their campaign's promises on immigration.
Five-year Amnesty Bill Under Discussion
See Roy Beck's Ratings for All Presidential Candidates on Immigration Issues
NumbersUSA Founder and CEO Roy Beck has analyzed and ranked all presidential candidates based on the campaign promises they have made and their past actions in elected office. NumbersUSA encourages all candidates to turn away from bad or poor positions of the past, and asks concerned voters to encourage them in working towards "true" immigration reform solutions that don't reward illegal aliens. Per our policy, candidates will be rewarded with improved ratings when they adopt the preferences of the majority of Americans for far less overall immigration.