DACA kids, H4 spouses, H-1B techies wish for a happier year.
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In a letter to Senator Cornyn, Democratic co-sponsors of the Bill sum up the plight of the huge community stuck in green card backlog.
“Immigrants make this country stronger and our economy more dynamic,” he says.
“Walk for Equality” will start from the City Hall in downtown Chicago and end at Durbin’s office.
The city council expresses “severe concern for the developments in Kashmir” and declares its “solidarity with the Kashmiri people.”
The enormously influential Miller has his finger print in nearly every controversial Trump immigration policy.
Objection from any one senator can thwart the vote.
Its companion bill, the bipartisan H.R. 1044, or the “Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act,” has already been passed by the House.
23 members of Congress attend the event, but four of five Indian American members stay away.
2020 hopeful Tim Ryan introduced the campaign merchandise this week.
However, with almost half the community still not naturalized, it has “a long way to go,” the Drew University professor says.
Impact Fund Executive Director Aruna Miller talks about the political engagement of the Indian American community.
Tens of thousands of highly qualified professionals are victims of the backlog.
An economist by training, she served as a a deputy assistant to Obama.
More Indian Americans, other immigrants share their go-back stories.
The petition, titled “Pass H.R. 1044/S.386,” was launched on July 15 and is aiming for 100,000 signatures to compel a White House response.
Many share their childhood experience of having been told “Go back to where you came from.”
The bi-partisan bill would increase the per-country limit on family-based visas from 7 percent to 15 percent.
From running a campaign to organizing in the field, several South Asian Americans are playing influential roles in presidential campaigns.
Bera, Khanna, Krishnamoorthi and Jayapal express solidarity with Muslims in the US and around the world.
Four out of six Indian Americans contesting elections won their seats. A total of 19 Indian Americans are now officials in town government.
Nonprofit strategist Colleen Brinkmann, who was born in India to an Indian mother, speaks about her recently released book “Moonshot Leadership” and philanthropy, among other issues.
Conservative lawyer highlights her Indian origin and immigrant experience as senators interview her for seat on powerful federal appeals court.
Florida teen Uma Menon attended the State of the Union as a guest of Rep. Stephanie Murphy after winning an essay contest.
Curl up with these cozy new reads by Indian American authors that deal with everything from politics, migration, feminism and sex.