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OCR Page 1 of 3COPY
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
BUREAU OF THE BUDGET
WASHINGTON 25, D. C.
February 18, 1952
MEMORANDUM FOR MR. DAVID LLOYD
Subject: The McCarran and Walter Omnibus Immigration and
Naturalization Bills.
S. 2550 (McCarran) and H. R. 5678 (Walter) are omnibus bills
that would codify and make many changes in existing immigration
and naturalization laws. They have been favorably reported by the
Senate and House Judiciary Committees respectively.
Chief merits of the McCarran bill are that it would remove racial
barriers to naturalization, extend quotas to certain Asiatics for the
first time, abolish discrimination based on sex, and facilitate the im-
migration of persons whose services are "urgently needed'in the
United States. Restrictive provisions of the bill based on political af-
filiations may perhaps be considered an improvement over the similar
provisions of the Internal Security Act in that their application would
be limited to persons affiliated with parties and organizations which
advocate the establishment of a Communist or other totalitarian dic-
tatorship in the United States. Reformed members of such parties
and organizations could be admitted to this country.
On the other hand, the McCarran bill would actually introduce new
forms of racial discrimination against the immigration of Asiatics and
all colonial peoples. It would do nothing to make much-needed adjust-
ments in the "national origins" quota system and would not even bring
the system up to date (would retain 1920 census as basis for quotas).
Some extremely vague and some abusive grounds for exclusion and
deportation would be retroactively applicable, i.e., aliens could be de-
ported for acts which were not grounds for deportation when committed.
The President would be given sweeping discretionary authority to ex-
clude any and all aliens. The Attorney General would be given broad
authority to deport aliens, but his authority to suspend deportation
would be unduly restricted. Unnecessary obstacles would be placed
in the way of natuealization; denaturalization would perhaps be over-
simplified in some cases. Organizationally, the bill violates sound
principles of administration.
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Terms
Subject
Emigration and immigration law
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