In Tuesday's vice presidential debate, Sen. JD Vance claimed that housing in the U.S. "is totally unaffordable" due to immigrants. Here's what to know.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen defended the benefits of immigration, arguing it has been an important source of labor supply and innovation and, more broadly, a growth for the US economy.
About 61% of voters say immigration is very important to their vote in 2024, which is a 9-percentage point increase from the 2020 presidential election, according to a report by the Pew Research Center.
Ohio Sen. JD Vance received a mixed reaction from voters as he discussed the border crisis and potential deporations during his debate with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.
With Americans groaning under the weight of high rents and home prices, the Republican vice presidential nominee sees a primary culprit: immigrants, who he says are pushing up housing costs. It's certainly a plausible story,
In the survey conducted in late September, 34% say the economy is the most important issue, with immigration a distant second at 17%.
VERDICT: Project 2025 does not mention a registry of pregnancies and there is no evidence Trump is planning to introduce one. Here, Walz was trying to link Vance and Trump to Project 2025 - a wish list of ultra-conservative policy proposals by the Heritage Foundation think tank.
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump campaign at the border, while Arizona voters consider Proposition 314, a measure that targets illegal immigration.
Immigration and housing prices were hot topics in Tuesday night’s vice-presidential debate, with Republican nominee Sen. J.D. Vance citing what he called a Federal Reserve study that links those two subjects.
Ohio, followed up on his vow to provide sources for his claim during Tuesday's vice presidential debate that the surge in illegal immigration has contributed to higher U.S. housing costs.
Tim Walz rarely references his faith on the campaign trail. He acknowledged as much Tuesday during the vice presidential debate. “I don’t talk about my faith a lot,” Walz said. But he went on to use a Bible verse to explain his beliefs about immigration and his support for a bill that aimed to solve ongoing issues at the southern border.