Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952
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Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952
The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) of 1952 (Also known as the McCarran-Walter Act) restricted immigration into the U.S. and is codified under Title 8 of the United States Code. The Act governs primarily immigration and citizenship in the United States. Before the INA, a variety of statutes governed immigration law but were not organized within one body of text. As a result of the September 11, 2001 attacks, the INA has undergone a major restructuring beginning in March 2003 and its provisions regarding the admissibility and removability of terrorist suspects has received much media and scholarly attention. BackgroundThe bill was named after the bill's sponsors: Senator Pat McCarran (D-Nevada), and Congressman Francis Walter (D-Pennsylvania). Racial restrictions which previously existed were abolished in the INA, but a quota system was retained and the policy of restricting the numbers of immigrants from certain countries was continued. Eventually, the INA established a preference system which selected which ethnic groups were desirable immigrants and placed great importance on labor qualifications. The INA defined three types of immigrants: 1. immigrants with special skills or relatives of US citizens who were exempt from quotas and who were to be admitted without restrictions; 2. average immigrants whose numbers were not supposed to exceed 270,000 per year; 3. refugees. The Act allowed the government to deport immigrants or naturalized citizens engaged in subversive activities and also allowed the barring of suspected subversives from entering the country. It was used over the years to bar members and former members and "fellow travelers" of the Communist Party from entry into the United States, even those who had not been associated with the party for decades. The Act had been used to exclude numerous prominent individuals until its ideological clauses were repealed in 1990. These include British sociologist Tom Bottomore, Argentine novelist Julio Cortazar, Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish, Colombian novelist and Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez, Chilean poet and Nobel Laureate Pablo Neruda, Uruguayan scholar Angel Rama, philosopher Michel Foucault (France), Italian playwright and Nobel Laureate Dario Fo, and authors Graham Greene (Great Britain), Doris Lessing (Zimbabwe (Rhodesia)-Great Britain, later a Nobel Laureate), Dennis Brutus (South Africa), Farley Mowat (Canada), who wrote a book on the episode, K?b? Abe (Japan), Carlos Fuentes (Mexico), and Jan Myrdal (Sweden)http://www.pen.org/corefreedoms/3.html, as well as Pierre Trudeau prior to becoming Prime Minister of Canada . Commentary
PassageTruman vetoed the McCarran-Walter Act because he regarded the bill as "un-American" and discriminatory. Truman's veto was overridden by a vote of 278 to 113 in the House, and 57 to 26 in the Senate. Parts of the McCarran-Walter act remain in place today but much of it was overturned by the Immigration and Nationality Services Act of 1965. Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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