Statement by President Harry S. Truman, Veto of Bill to Revise the Laws Relating to Immigration, Naturalization, and Nationality
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OCR Page 1 of 83279
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
June 25, 1952
CONFIDENTIAL: To be held in STRICT CONFIDENCE and no portion,
synopsis or intimation to be given out or published until the
President's Message has been delivered to the House of Repre-
sentatives. Extreme care must therefore be exercised to avoid
premature publication.
JOSEPH SHORT
Secretary to the President
TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES:
I return herewith, without my approval, H.R. 5678, the
proposed Immigration and Nationality Act.
In outlining my objections to this bill, I want to make it
clear that it contains certain provisions that meet with my approval.
This is a long and complex piece of legislation. It has 164 separate
sections, some with more than 40 subdivisions. It presents a difficult
problem of weighing the good against the bad, and arriving at a judg-
ment on the whole.
H.R. 5678 is an omnibus bill which would revise and codify
all of our laws relating to immigration, naturalization, and nationality.
A general revision and modernization of these laws unquestion-
ably is needed and long overdue, particularly with respect to immigration.
But this bill would not provide us with an immigration policy adequate
for the present world situation. Indeed, the bill, taking all its pro-
visions together, would be a step backward and not a step forward. In
view of the crying need for reform in the field of immigration, I deeply
regret that I am unable to approve H.R. 5678.
In recent years, our immigration policy has become a matter
of
major national concern. Long dormant questions about the effect
of our immigration laws now assume first rate importance. What we
do
in
the field of inmigration and naturalization is vital to the continued
growth and internal development of the United States -- to the economic
and social strength of our country -- which is the core of the defense
of the free world. Our immigration policy is equally, if not more im-
portant to the conduct of our foreign relations and to our responsibili-
ties of moral leadership in the struggle for world peace.
In one respect, this bill recognizes the great international
significance of our inmigration and naturalization policy, and takes
a step to improve existing laws. All racial bars to naturalization
would be removed, and at least some minimum immigration quota would be
afforded to each of the free nations of Asia.
I have long urged that racial or national barriers to natu-
ralization be abolished. This was one of the recommendations in my
civil rights message to the Congress on February 2, 1948. On February 19,
1951, the House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill to carry
it out.
But now this most desirable provision comes before me embedded
in a mass of legislation which would perpetuate injustices of long
standing against many other nations of the world, hamper the efforts
we are making to rally the men of East and West alike to the cause of
freedom, and intensify the repressive and inhumane aspects of our immi-
gration procedures. The price is too high, and in good conscience I
cannot agree to pay it.
(OVER)
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