(far left), the
East River (right) and the Statue of Liberty (foreground)
Immigration to the United States Paul Auster wrote, "Bartholdi's gigantic effigy was originally intended as a monument to the principles of international
republicanism, but 'The New Colossus' reinvented the statue's purpose, turning Liberty into a welcoming mother, a symbol of hope to the outcasts and downtrodden of the world."
John T. Cunningham wrote, "The Statue of Liberty was not conceived and sculpted as a symbol of immigration, but it quickly became so as immigrant ships passed under the torch and the shining face, heading toward Ellis Island. However, it was [Lazarus's poem] that permanently stamped on Miss Liberty the role of unofficial greeter of incoming immigrants." The poem was quoted in
John F. Kennedy's book
A Nation of Immigrants (1958). In 2019, during the first
Trump administration,
Ken Cuccinelli, whom Trump appointed as acting director of
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, revised a line from the poem in support of the administration's "
public charge rule", which would have rejected would-be immigrants who lacked adequate income and education to support themselves. Cuccinelli would have rewritten the caveat as, "Give me your tired and your poor who can stand on their own two feet, and who will not become a public charge". He later suggested that the "huddled masses" should be European, and he downplayed the poem as "not actually part of the original Statue of Liberty." Cuccinelli's remark prompted criticism. The Trump administration rule was later blocked by a federal appeals court. == Cultural reception ==