Donald Trump's no-Muslims immigration idea right in line with U.S., Canadian history - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:46 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Donald Trump's no-Muslims immigration idea right in line with U.S., Canadian history

While Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's call for a "total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States" has drawn ire from both ends of the political spectrum as being out of step with American values, history tells a different story.

U.S. and Canada have 5 times barred immigrants based on race, nationality or disability

U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump points to a supporter at a Pearl Harbor Day rally aboard the USS Yorktown Memorial in Mount Pleasant, S.C., on Monday, where he called for a ban on Muslims entering the United States. (Randall Hill/Reuters)

While Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's call for a "total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States" has drawn ire from both ends of the political spectrum as being out of step with American values, history tells a different story.

Here are five examples of the U.S. and Canada excluding immigrants based on their race,nationality or disability.

1. Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882

The first page of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration)

The first major law restricting immigration to the U.S. was the Chinese Exclusion Act, which barred all Chinese people from entering the United States.

Signed into law onMay 6, 1882, the actcame amid outcry from American-born citizens thatChinese workerswere to blame for the high unemployment and declining wages plaguing the West Coast.

Not only did the law bar Chinese immigration, but it also preventedChinese people already living in the country from gaining citizenship.

The law, originally written to last10 years, was repeatedly amended and extended until itsrepeal in 1943, when China became an ally against Japan during the Second World War.

2. Immigration Act of 1917

This U.S. federal law was the first to restrict immigration to those who could pass a literacy test.

It also banned all immigration from the so-called "Asiatic Barred Zone," which encompassedIndia, Afghanistan, Persia (now Iran), Arabia, parts of the Ottoman Empire and Russia, Southeast Asiaand the Asian-Pacific islands.

Furthermore, it expanded an alreadyexistingcategory of barred "undesirables" to include sex workers, criminals, alcoholics, political radicals, contract labourers, "idiots, imbeciles, and [the]feeble-minded," people withepilepsy, tuberculosis orcontagious disease, as well as anyone else deemed"mentally or physically defective."

3.Chinese Immigration Act of 1923

The United States wasn't alone in discriminating against Chinese immigrants.

In Canada, the federal government imposed a $50 head tax on Chinese immigrants in 1885 after Chinese workers were no longer needed to work on the Canadian Pacific Railway.The amount was raised to $500 in 1903,the equivalent of about two years' wages at the time.

Former prime minister Stephen Harper greets Chinese head tax survivor James Pon in Ottawa on June 22, 2006, during a ceremony announcing the government's official apology for the tax. The head tax was imposed on Chinese immigrants to Canada from 1885 to 1923 and was a considerable hardship at the time. (Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)

On July 1, 1923, the head tax was replaced by theChinese Immigration Act,which barred any Chinese immigrants or ethnic Chinese people of other nationalities from entering the country. There were some exceptions for merchants, diplomatsand foreign students with proper documentation.

Canada also cast suspicion on thosealready living here,forcing all people ofChinese origin or descent to register with authorities and to obtain an identity certificate.

The act remained in effect until 1947.

4.Immigration Act of 1924

In this 1938 photo, prospective immigrants line up outside the U.S. consulate in Vienna after the German annexation of Austria. American Jews struggled to get refugees out of Nazi-era Europe due to strict immigration quotas in the U.S. (Museum of Jewish Heritage/ Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library/Associated Press)

In an attempt to stem the tide ofeastern European immigration to America, the U.S. enacted a quota system,stipulating thatvisas be provided only to two per cent of the total number of people of each nationality in the United States as of the 1890 national census.

Because so many eastern Europeans movedto the U.S.in the decades leading up to the First World War, lawmakers opted not to use themore recent census of 1910 to calculate the quotas.

The act also barred entry to "any alien who by virtue of race or nationality was ineligible for citizenship" a provision aimed at theJapanese.

The effects of the quota system were particularly devastating for European Jews, who struggled to obtain visas leading up to the Second World War and the Holocaust.

5. 'Excessive demand' on health care

The Canadian Immigration and Citizenship Act states "a foreign national is inadmissible on health grounds if their health condition might reasonably be expected to cause excessive demand on health or social services."

Thiswording has been used to bar entry of people withillnesses or disabilities.

In 2011, aSouth Korean family living in New Brunswick faced deportation becausetheirteenage son is autistic. The deportation order was later reversed amid public outcry.

Again in 2012, the National Post reported that aUniversity of Victoria professor from the U.S. and his family weredenied permanent residency in Canada because of theirfour-year-old son's autism.