Trump
Officials Move to Quickly Expel Migrants Biden Allowed In Temporarily
A memo
appears to allow Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to target
programs that let in more than a million people.
Hamed
Aleaziz
By Hamed
Aleaziz
Reporting
from Washington
Jan. 23,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/us/politics/trump-immigrants-deportation.html
The Trump
administration is giving Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials the
power to quickly deport migrants who were allowed into the country temporarily
under Biden-era programs, according to an internal government memo obtained by
The New York Times.
The memo,
signed Thursday night by the acting head of the Homeland Security Department,
offers ICE officials a road map on how to use expansive powers that were long
reserved only for encounters at the southern border to quickly remove migrants.
It also appears to give the officials the ability to expel migrants in two
major Biden-era programs that have allowed more than a million people to enter
the country temporarily.
Those
programs — an app called CBP One that migrants could use to try to schedule
appointments to enter the United States, and an initiative that let in certain
migrants fleeing Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti — were key pillars of the
Biden administration’s efforts to discourage illegal entries by allowing
certain legal pathways. Immigrant advocates also worried that the memo could
apply to Afghan and Ukrainian immigrants brought to the United States under
separate programs.
The decision
indicates that President Trump will try to use every facet of the immigration
enforcement apparatus to crack down on a system he has long said has been
abused, and that he intends to target not just those who sneaked across the
border but even those who followed previously authorized pathways to enter.
It is also
sure to raise fears among a large class of immigrants, many of whom had fled
desperate conditions, believed that they were in the country legally and might
be afraid to return to their often-dangerous home countries.
Both of
former President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s signature programs had faced heavy
criticism from Republicans, including Trump administration officials, as a way
to facilitate illegal immigration through the guise of a government program.
The migrants were given a grant to stay in the country for up to two years
under a temporary legal status known as “parole.” The memo appears to allow for
their deportation, regardless of whether they have reached the end of that
legal status or still have time remaining.
In total,
around 1.4 million migrants entered the country through the two programs since
the beginning of 2023.
A senior
Homeland Security official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the
effort rested on Mr. Trump’s belief that Mr. Biden’s immigration programs were
never lawful and that migrants in the country unlawfully should be removed
quickly.
Stephen
Miller, a White House deputy chief of staff and the architect of Mr. Trump’s
hard-line immigration policies, has made clear that he opposed both programs.
“Here’s an
idea: Don’t fly millions of illegals aliens from failed states thousands of
miles away into small towns across the American Heartland,” Mr. Miller said on
social media in September.
News of the
memo was met with immediate criticism from immigrant advocates and former Biden
officials.
“In addition
to raising serious legal concerns, subjecting people who played by the rules to
a summary deportation process is an outrageous and unprecedented betrayal,”
said Tom Jawetz, a senior lawyer in the Homeland Security Department in the
Biden administration.
Karen
Tumlin, the director of the Justice Action Center, an immigrant advocacy group,
said the decision was a mistake. She said she believed the memo could also
allow ICE officials to try to deport migrants from Afghanistan and Ukraine.
“American
communities have opened their hearts and homes for people from Cuba, Haiti,
Nicaragua, Venezuela, Afghanistan and Ukraine,” she said. “Punishing people who
did everything the government asked, and many of whom had U.S.-based sponsors,
to this summary deportation procedure is appalling.”
Mr. Trump
ordered the agency to shut down the Biden-era programs on Monday. That same
day, Benjamine C. Huffman, the acting homeland security secretary, issued a
separate memo ordering the phaseout of all such programs. On Tuesday, the
administration widened the deportation powers.
On Thursday,
Mr. Huffman provided additional guidance to the agency on the two key decisions
and how they interact with each other.
In the memo,
he directed ICE officials to analyze immigrants the agency is “aware of” who
can be deported under the new fast deportations, which sidestep immigration
courts, and consider whether they should be removed from the country. The memo
suggests that officials prioritize immigrants who have been in the country
longer than a year but who have not applied for asylum.
As part of
that, the memo says that officials can, if necessary, decide to move to strip
parole, a form of temporary legal status. Migrants brought under the two
Biden-era programs — as well as other initiatives involving Afghans and
Ukrainians — are in the country under that specific form of temporary status.
If migrants
are already in the formal deportation process — which can take years — ICE
officials can move to terminate their case and place them into the sped-up
deportation program.
The memo
also provides ICE officials the ability to target those who have been in the
country under a temporary program but have remained more than two years for
formal deportation proceedings.
The
fast-track deportation powers have already been challenged in federal court in
Washington by the American Civil Liberties Union. The lawsuit, filed Wednesday,
argues that the decision violated federal law.
“The Trump
administration wants to use this illegal policy to fuel its mass deportation
agenda and rip communities apart,” Anand Balakrishnan, an A.C.L.U. lawyer, said
in a statement. “Expanding expedited removal would give Trump a cheat code to
circumvent due process and the Constitution, and we are again here to fight
it.”
Hamed
Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy. More
about Hamed Aleaziz
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário