Arizona GOP lawmaker apologizes for 'browning of America' immigration comment
Arizona state Sen. Sylvia Allen (R) "sincerely apologized" on Facebook over the weekend "to anyone who has been hurt" by comments on immigration she made at the Arizona Republican Party headquarters on July 15, published late last week by the Phoenix New Times. Near the end of her speech, Allen brought up James Johnson, a University of North Carolina business professor who studies demographics, and things got dicey.
"Another thing that Dr. Johnson talked about is the 'Browning of America,' that America is fast becoming — we're going to look like South American countries very quickly," Allen said. "The median age of a white woman is 43. The median age of a Hispanic woman is 27. We are not reproducing ourselves, the birthrates. But here's what I see is the issue. It's because of immigration." She said her concern was "assimilation" and being unable to teach the flood of immigrants what makes America great, but she also worried about "what kind of form of government are we going to live under in 10 years?"
Allen wrote on Facebook that she was "quoting data directly from a speech" she heard by "Dr. Johnson (an African American)," and "The Browning of America" is "Dr. Johnson's title!!" The "reference to South America was the concern that some of these countries are socialist and that we must preserve our Constitutional Republic form of government and that we have not taught the next generation the difference," she said.
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Johnson's presentations portray immigration as a net positive, and he told The Washington Post on Sunday that the "browning" of America means "the nice and neat little crucibles we're accustomed to putting people in won't fit in the future because of the growing diversity of our population. ... And I view all of that as a strength, not as a weakness or a problem." It will be increasingly important to "embrace immigrants and people of color" to be globally competitive, he added.
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Peter has worked as a news and culture writer and editor at The Week since the site's launch in 2008. He covers politics, world affairs, religion and cultural currents. His journalism career began as a copy editor at a financial newswire and has included editorial positions at The New York Times Magazine, Facts on File, and Oregon State University.
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