Legal immigration to America has rebounded
Is anyone paying attention?

REPUBLICAN POLITICIANS often compare America’s southern border to Swiss cheese. It is more like a black hole. Its gravitational pull is so strong that officials can think only of enforcement and security (or the good electoral politics that come with harping on about enforcement and security). The names of small, dusty border towns—Eagle Pass, Jacumba Hot Springs—have never been so well known. The black hole leaves little time to consider the other parts of America’s creaking immigration system, such as refugees, skilled-worker visas or reforming quotas that are decades out of date.
Explore more
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Beyond the border”
United States June 22nd 2024
- Republicans are favoured to win the Senate. What would they do?
- Are America’s leading presidential candidates up to it?
- America is educating a nation of investors
- Lauren Boebert’s primary is a window into everyday Trumpism
- New research exposes the role of women in America’s slave trade
- Legal immigration to America has rebounded
- Donald Trump has finally got it right about the January 6th insurrectionists
Discover more

Why Larry Hogan’s long-odds bid for a Senate seat matters
He offers conservatives a pragmatic path beyond Trumpism

Polarisation by education is remaking American politics
The battle for Pennsylvania is a test case for new coalitions of Democrats and Republicans

Checks and Balance newsletter: Partisan positions have changed drastically over the past 50 years
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump converge as much as they differ
Hurricane Milton inundates Florida
Three factors laid the ground for its destructiveness
Shirley Chisholm is still winning
The first black woman to run for president taught a lesson in making political change
US election forecast: who will control the House of Representatives?
Our prediction model assesses each party’s chance of winning the chamber