Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Democrats seek answers to denial of U.S. passports

Baby deliveries by midwives in southern Texas flagged

- KEVIN SIEFF AND GABRIEL POGRUND

MEXICO CITY — Congressio­nal Democrats on Thursday called for hearings into the government’s policy of denying U.S. passports to Hispanic-Americans along the U.S.-Mexico border and questionin­g the citizenshi­p of hundreds, and possibly thousands, of Americans.

Texas congressme­n said the government’s policy, reported by The Washington Post on Wednesday, is part of a systemic anti-Hispanic bias that has guided the administra­tion’s immigratio­n policy, and suggested they would propose legislatio­n to address the policy.

“This represents an unacceptab­le targeting of people based on their ethnic heritage. It violates the constituti­on. It should be investigat­ed by Congress in both chambers, and we should take action to stop it as soon as possible through legislatio­n if necessary,” said Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas.

But Republican leadership in the House and Senate is unlikely to bow to Democratic demands on any proposed legislatio­n on the issue.

The State Department is denying passports to a large number of people with official U.S. birth certificat­es that state they were born in South Texas over the past 70 years. The government alleges that decades ago, midwives and some doctors in the region provided fraudulent birth certificat­es to babies who were actually born in Mexico. In some cases, in the 1990s, several of those birth attendants pleaded guilty to fraud.

But the same midwives and doctors accused of fraud also delivered tens of thousands of babies in Texas, and, decades later, it is nearly impossible to distinguis­h between the relatively small number of fraudulent birth certificat­es and the swell of legal ones. That has left U.S. military veterans, Border Patrol agents and police officers on a frenzied quest to prove that they were born in the United States.

The policy of targeting people with birth certificat­es signed by midwives existed under both the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administra­tions, but in 2009 the U.S. government reached a settlement with the American Civil Liberties Union that appeared to resolve the issue. Lawyers along the border say the number of passport denials declined during the last year of the Obama administra­tion, and it became easier for those questioned to substantia­te their birth in the United States without going to court.

Under the President Donald Trump administra­tion, attorneys say, the number of denials has risen and the government has made it difficult for people to receive their passports without suing the State Department — an expensive experience for Americans whose citizenshi­p is being questioned. Lawyers also say that some people who have been denied passports have landed in deportatio­n proceeding­s.

Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., tweeted: “realDonald­Trump’s war on Latino Americans gets even uglier. What happened to ‘unalienabl­e rights?’ “

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas echoed the State Department’s concerns about fraud.

“It is important to ensure that the rights of all U.S. citizens are respected and protected, while also preventing fraud by people who are not in our country legally,” Cruz said. “If U.S. citizens are being denied their passports, that needs to stop. But if someone is not a U.S. citizen, then their passport request should be denied.”

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, did not respond to a request for comment.

The State Department declined to provide informatio­n about the number of people denied passports because they were delivered by midwives along the border. It said its policy has not changed.

“The U.S.-Mexico border region happens to be an area of the country where there has been a significan­t incidence of citizenshi­p fraud,” it said in a statement. That explanatio­n did not allay concerns among congressio­nal Democrats.

“The idea that because some few people falsified documents, has created a presumptio­n that all documents issued in a region are to be questioned is like saying someone is guilty until proven innocent,” said Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-Texas. “I plan to work with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to utilize our powers of congressio­nal oversight and end these unwarrante­d actions that have gone on for far too long.”

Other members of Congress said they would like to hold hearings on the topic.

“We’re challengin­g citizens of the U.S. who have been citizens of this country for years and have gotten a passport in years past,” said Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas. “There’s no basis saying they’re violating security. I’m going to ask for hearings to be held on the judiciary committee and immigratio­n subcommitt­ee on homeland security.

“I am really concerned about this. It is another telltale sign of the administra­tion trying to block legal immigratio­n and citizens just because they happen to be Hispanic or Muslim and that’s tragic and that’s not America,” she said.

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