Vice President RICHARD M. NIXON,
Waldorf Astoria Hotel,
New York, N.Y.:
All Americans applaud your recent statement outlining a program to liberalize our immigration laws. Especially encouraging are your proposals to double the number of persons admitted each year to the United States, and to make available unused portions of some countries' quotas for the benefit of nationals desiring to come to the United States from other countries having oversubscribed quotas. Because, however, I am particularly interested in the pressing human need to reunite family groups - a need which you acknowledged in your recent statement - I wish you would explain in detail your plans for achieving this vitally important goal.
DEAR GOVERNOR DEL SESTO : I share completely
your belief that the reunification of family groups is of paramount importance.
As you know, the administration has already
taken forward steps in this direction but the need now is for immediate
action to solve the whole problem and that is what I propose to recommend
as soon as the Congress convenes in January.
Sons and daughters, brothers and sisters,
and aged parents - long separated - have been waiting year upon year, patiently
and hopefully, for a chance to join their blood relatives in the United
States, a chance which has been denied to most of them. Family members
in the United States want nothing more than to take these same relatives
into their own homes and, where necessary, to provide them with employment
opportunities.
The family members waiting abroad, therefore,
would not be coming to the United States as strangers in a new land where,
all alone they might face formidable difficulties in adjusting to a new
language, to new customs, and to a totally new environment. Rather they
would be welcomed into established households, they would be materially
assisted in their economic needs, and the whole process of their integration
and assimilation into the American community would be eased and quickened
- to say nothing of the heartfelt joy and happiness which all such family
members would feel with the arrival of loved ones from abroad.
Under the McCarran-Walter Act, thousands of
U.S. citizens - including those of Australian, Hungarian, Greek, Israeli,
Italian, Japanese, Lebanese, Philippine, Portuguese, Spanish, and Yugoslav
extraction - were encouraged to file applications to sponsor the entry
of their relatives into this country. They filed these applications and
many have been waiting for years, and are still waiting, for their relatives
to arrive. They wait in vain because their relatives, except for a few,
have been unable to come to the United States and cannot come here. The
hopes that were raised by the McCarran-Walter Act have proved a cruel disappointment.
Today there are thousands of family members
who are registered, or included in registrations, on lists of over-subscribed
quotas. To reunite these people with their relatives in the United States,
we must have special legislation that will quickly, solve this whole problem
by bringing such people into this country without regard to quotas.
I will therefore recommend in January that
this problem be handled by a law dealing specifically with it.
RICHARD NIXON.