Anxiety and suspicions of immigrants and Catholics contributed to a few organizations. None captured the imagination of the country like the Ku Klux Klan (American Yawp). Hiram Evans in “The Klan’s fight for Americanism” says, “There are three of these great racial instincts, vital elements in both the historic and the present …show more content…
Americans blamed immigrants from Eastern Europe and Latin America. The changes in the racial character of immigrants led to a continuous agitation of the immigration problem in and out of Congress. There was a steady demand for restrictions on new immigrants from southern and eastern Europe. The U.S. Department of Labor distinguished old immigrants and new immigrants by the part of Europe in which they migrated from. The old immigrants were from northwestern Europe. The new immigrants were from southern and eastern Europe, Latin America, and Asia. In 1921, Congress passed the Emergency Immigration Act. Three years later, they permanently established “country-of-origin quotas through the National Origin Act” (American Yawp). The number of immigrants admitted to the United States could not exceed three percent of the population who had come from that country and resided in the United States in 1890. The act also excluded Asians but temporarily omitted restrictions on Mexican immigrants. Basically, this law made it extremely difficult for any immigrant outside of Northern Europe to enter America legally. This is probably something that the Ku Klux Klan would have agreed with because it seems to only allow white protestant citizens to enter into the United States