The Luce-Celler Act of 1946 was proposed by Republican Clare Booth Luce and Democrat Emanuel Celler in 1943 and signed into law by President Harry Truman on July 2, 1946.
The act provided a quota of 100 Filipinos,[1] and 100 Indians to immigrate into the United States per year.[2] As the Philippines became independent from the United States in 1946, Filipinos would have been barred from immigrating without the act.[3]
The act also allowed Filipino Americans and Indian Americanstonaturalize and become United States Citizens.[4] Upon becoming citizens, these new Americans could own homes and farmland, and petition for family from their nation of birth.[5]
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The Philippines was granted independence in 1946, and Filipinos, then barred from immigration along with individuals from other countries in the "Eastern Hemisphere," were allotted 100 immigration slots (Yu 1980).
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