Obama Marks Immigrant Heritage Month

4929E399-02A2-4CCE-9EC4-715D80FA17BF_w640_r1_s_cx0_cy2_cw0In honor of Immigrant Heritage Month, U.S. President Barack Obama wants Americans to share the stories of their families’ immigrant roots.

In his weekly address Saturday, Obama urged Americans to go to The New Americans Project website to tell their stories.

“We are a nation of immigrants. It’s a source of strength and something we can take pride in,” he said.

The president also said, “We can’t just celebrate this heritage, we have to defend it by fixing our broken immigration system.”

Obama said Democrats and Republicans in the Senate did that two years ago when they passed “a common sense bill” that included a pathway to citizenship.

However, he said Republican leaders in the House of Representatives for nearly two years “have refused to even allow a vote on it.”

“In the meantime, I’m going to keep doing everything I can to make our immigration system more just and more fair,” Obama said. “It’s the right thing to do. And it will make America stronger.”

This June marks the second annual U.S. Immigrant Heritage Month, meant to honor the accomplishments and role of immigrants in shaping U.S. history and culture.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2013 American Community Survey, the nation’s immigrant population was more than 41 million, or 13 percent of the total population of 316 million.

U.S. immigration population over time, 1850 – 2013
AEA760EB-FE87-43C1-A855-8E248944FDF1_w640_s
Mexican-born immigrants are the majority, comprising 28 percent of the 41 million total immigrant populations.

Although the number of Mexican immigrants remains the highest in the country, in recent years it has started to decline as a result of recession, improved educational and economic opportunities at home, and tougher border enforcement.

Meanwhile, immigrant groups from India and China, including Hong Kong, but not Taiwan, each account for about 5 percent of the United States’ total immigrant population; many moving to the country to work, study or join family members already here.

The Philippines has the fourth highest number of immigrants living in the United States at 4 percent, while residents from Vietnam, El Salvador, Cuba and Korea each make up 3 percent of the immigrant total.

 

Leave a comment