The country teeters on the edge of government shutdown as Democrats refuse to cave to President Trump's demand to fund the Mexican border wall. (CNN) But any wall on the US-Mexico border will soon be "beside the point," writes Janan Ganesh in Financial Times. "Asians are projected to become the largest share of the overall US immigrant population by the middle of the century." "The wall, unless it is built around airports to the tune of 40,000 vertical feet, is a non-factor." The specter of the wall "distracts from the country's true demographic future… [M]ore people have immigrated to the US from Asia than from Latin America in every year since 2010… [O]ver the same period, two of the four countries with the largest net immigration to the US were China and India" and "the US has accepted more refugees from Asia than from Europe, Latin America and Africa put together." "It is a stretch, I know, to hope that a wider range of immigrants will soothe anti-immigrant sentiment," writes Ganesh. But the future hinges on the votes of Asian immigrants. In spite of the conservative casting of Asians as "model minorities," "Asian voters still broke for the Democrats in the midterm elections." |
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