Numbers USA

"Immigration, It's About The Numbers" +

:30 TV ad run during the first Rep. debate on Aug. 6, 2015 and during the first Dem. debate on Oct. 13, 2015. 

[Music]
The immigration debate...
should not be about the color of people's skin...
or their country of origin...
or where their grandparents were born.
The debate should be about the numbers.  Should Congress give work permits...
to one million new legal immigrants again this year...
when millions of Americans of all colors...
national origins...
and religions are having trouble finding jobs.
Immigration: it's about the numbers,
the numbers,
the numbers.

Male Announcer: See where politicians stand on the numbers at NumbersUSA.com.  Paid for by NumbersUSA.


Notes: The press release...

NumbersUSA Ad In Presidential Debate Asks Candidates To Focus On Numbers And One Million Legal Immigrants A Year

WASHINGTON, Aug. 5, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The greatest concern about immigration policy should be the overall numbers admitted and not about the race, national origin and other characteristics of individual immigrants, claims the NumbersUSA TV commercial to be aired during this Thursday's Republican Presidential debate on FOX News.

"We are glad that candidates are beginning to address various problems of our immigration policies, but our ad seeks to remind presidential hopefuls and voters that the overwhelming issue is that our government will admit another one million immigrants into the United Statesthis year alone," said Roy Beck, President of NumbersUSA, a grassroots organization claiming nearly 3 million participants.  

"All American wage-earners and their families are potentially affected by the fact that every one of those million new immigrants each year gets a life-time work authorization to compete for jobs despite persistent wage stagnation and 17 million Americans who are still unemployed or underemployed."

The TV ad features a diverse group of Americans calmly making the point that the immigration debate should not be about the color of people's skin or their nation of origin, but it should be about the numbers.   

The ad invites viewers to see where each politician stands on immigration numbers by going towww.NumbersUSA.com.  There they will find the NumbersUSA Worker-Protection Immigration Grade Cards which provide ratings in 10 immigration categories and an overall grade for how each of 21 Republican and Democratic Presidential hopefuls would "affect Americans' jobs and wages by changing the supply of workers" through actions addressing both illegal and legal immigration. 

For more information about NumbersUSA or to view the NumbersUSA TV commercial, please visit www.NumbersUSA.com.