As a prelude to this article, my last immigration column, please allow me to thank the New York Law Journal and its readers for their dedicated 22 years of readership. I am retiring from my position at Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy at the end of this month.
I have had the great fortune of practicing immigration law for the past 35 years, the first five of which were with the government. Over this time, I have observed both periods of revolutionary immigration legislation and extensive congressional gridlock. More recently, partisanship in Congress has halted immigration reform, pushing the executive branch to directly implement executive action in order to initiate change.
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