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OCR Page 1 of 5From Senston Lehmand
office
June 11, 1952
SUMMARY OF McCARRAN-ALTER OMNIBUS IMMIGRATION BILL
(S.2550; H.R.5678)
In its final form, as réported out of conference and passed by both Houses
of Congress on June 10 and 11, the pending McCarran-Walter Omnibus Immigration Bill
(S.2550, H.R. 5678) would write into law more than 20 new grounds for deporting
Displaced Persons and other immigrants admitted in past years, thirteen new grounds
for excluding future immigrants, and an undetermined number of new ways of losing
one's American citizenship. This bill, over 300 pages in length, although ad-
vertised as a "codification statute, would make more than a hundred changes in
Federal law governing immigration, deportation, and citizenship.
In substance the McCarran-Wal ter Omnibus Bill would authorize the complete
stoppage of future immigration to the United States, and would shut down on current
immigration, except for certain narrowly restricted categories. It would provide
for deporting Displaced Persons and other immigrants admitted in past years who
do not meet the new rigid McCarran-Walter standards, which the bill would make re-
troactive. The bill would also deprive American citizens of citizenship on various
grounds which the Supreme Court has not hitherto allowed.
The most important changes in existing law that would be made by the pending
bill are here summarized.
*
I. Immigration
Among other changes in existing law the pending bill would:
1. Limit all future immigration to the United States to immigrants of "high
education, technical training, specialized experience, or exceptional ability" who
are "needed urgently in the United States" (Sec. 203(a)), and to parents of adult
citizens, and spouses or children of admitted immigrants, except to the degree that
unused visas, if any, under these categories may be used for immigrants without
such special qualifications.
* Each of the following organizations has testified in opposition to amendments of
existing immigration laws which are among those listed in this memorandum:
American Bar Association, American Civil Liberties Union, American Federation of In-
ternational Institutes, American Federation of Labor, American Friends Committee,
American Jewish Committee, American Jewish Congress, Americans for Democratic Action,
Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, Association of Immigration and Nationality
Lawyers, Common Council for American Unity, Council for Social Action of the Con-
gregational Christian Churches, Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society, Inter-
national Rescue Committee, Jewish Labor Committee, Jewish War Veterans of the
U.S.A.,
National Catholic Rural Life Conference, National Catholic Welfare Conference,
National Community Relations Advisory Council, National Council of Jewish Women,
Synagogue Council of America, Union d American Hebrew Congregations, United Service
for New Americans, Young Women's Christian Association. Fuller explanations of the
provisions here summarized will be found in the testimony of the foregoing organi-
zations printed in the Joint Hearings before the Subcommittees of the Committee on
the Judiciary, 82d Cong., lst sess., on S.716, H.R.2379, and H.R.2816, especially
in statements beginning at pages 126, 230, 378, 413, 526, 562, 615, 656, 661, 667,
732, 738, 743, 747, and 752.
CS TRUMAN NARA
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