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New US citizens gladly take oath, despite toxic debate
NEW YORK, United States — The US Citizenship and ImmigrationServices welcomes 200 new citizens from 50 countries during aceremony in honour of Independence Day at the New York PublicLibrary on July 3, 2018 in New York. (Photo: AFP)
Business
July 5, 2018

New US citizens gladly take oath, despite toxic debate

Number of Jamaican immigrants down

NEW YORK, United States (AFP) — Argenoves Pinales, a 25-year-old medical assistant and restaurant manager working two jobs, is over the moon to become a US citizen. Now he wants to vote Donald Trump out of office.

“I feel great,” he beams, one of 200 immigrants from 47 countries who pledged the oath of allegiance at a New York citizenship ceremony, and one of more than 14,000 being welcomed nationwide at dozens of events between June 28 and July 10 designed to celebrate Independence Day.

He dreams of going back to college to study criminal justice and joining the police department. He was one of 86 migrants from the Dominican Republic at Tuesday’s ceremony, the largest single group and one of those countries experiencing a decline in US immigration visas.

“Everyone in my house is a citizen, so they were asking me ‘oh, you have to become one’,” he said. “So if something happens you can stay here.”

The number of people getting visas to move permanently to the United States is expected to fall by 12 per cent during Trump’s first two years in office, according to a Washington Post analysis of government data.

“I became a citizen to vote,” says Pinales, looking ahead to 2020, the next time that Americans can elect a president. “He’s not going to be there!” he says of Trump.

“When he talks it’s just him, him, him, him. You know he’s rich, he’s got money, so he doesn’t care about poor people.”

The number of immigrant visas granted to people from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, China, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, India, Jamaica, Mexico, Pakistan, the Philippines and Vietnam had also declined, the Washington Post analysis found.

At Tuesday’s ceremony, in the illustrious Beaux-Arts New York Public Library building on Fifth Avenue, a taped message of welcome from Trump was greeted with warm applause. God Bless the USA was played.

MIXED EMOTIONS

Young, old, people of all colours and backgrounds were united in one purpose — cheering in delight and many waving tiny US flags. The more gregarious posed thumbs up or blew a kiss to excited friends and relatives in the audience while collecting their certificates.

“For all its flaws — we have many — it is a great country,” said Tony Marx, president of the New York Public Library, delivering a rallying cry for civic engagement and the responsibilities of democracy.

“When you see the country going in directions you don’t agree with, from left or right, I don’t care… you now are citizens and you must act as citizens in the polling booths, on the streets, in meetings.”

Immigration has always ebbed and flowed. If Barack Obama presided over an increase later in his Administration, the number of visas so far granted under Trump are still higher than in earlier Obama years.

But if US politicians are paralysed about illegal immigration, those who spoke to AFP — having jumped through all the hoops themselves — were united in believing others had to abide by the law.

Of the seven new citizens who agreed to speak, Pinales alone was directly critical of Trump. Several expressed positive thoughts, others declined to comment.

“I understand both sides. They want to secure the country. At the same time people want to be with their family. So it’s mixed emotions,” said Aziz Traore, 23, who arrived from Mali as a seven-year-old.

The Washington Post says the number of immigrant visas approved for Africans is set to fall by 15 per cent.

“I know a lot of Third-World countries and there’s a lot of crimes over there and problems with the government,” he told AFP.

“He’s the president,” said Drvan Victorin, 19, who migrated from the tiny Caribbean island of St Lucia in search of a better life. “He knows what’s best for us. So I think he’s doing it for a good reason.”

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