Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden to reverse Trump policies

- ABIGAIL HAUSLOHNER

Some of the most notable declines in immigrant visa issuance under the Trump administra­tion have occurred among nationals that Trump publicly disparaged or targeted specifical­ly.

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden plans to reverse many, if not all, of the Trump administra­tion policies that immigratio­n lawyers and officials say have reduced the flow of migrants to the United States, aiming to get things back to the way they were before starting on any fresh goals.

Biden has pledged to “restore and defend the naturaliza­tion process for green-card holders,” and to “support family-based immigratio­n.” He also has said he wants to preserve “preference­s for diversity in the current system,” because Trump has sought to eliminate what is commonly known as the diversity visa lottery that ensures that the United States draws immigrants from everywhere instead of the small number of countries that are overrepres­ented in family and employment-based immigrant visas.

Biden’s new ideas — increasing the overall number of work-based immigratio­n visas, changing the high-skilled work visas known as H1-Bs to ensure less abuse of the workers and the system, expanding paths to citizenshi­p for long-term agricultur­al workers, and allowing cities to petition the federal government for higher levels of immigratio­n to support their growth — probably will have to wait, and will require bipartisan cooperatio­n, experts say.

But the Biden administra­tion will first have to figure out how to get the paperwork flowing again. Visa processing times and admissions, particular­ly for citizens of Africa, Asia and South America, have slowed since President Donald Trump took office because of changes that administra­tion officials say were necessary to properly vet foreign travelers.

Some of the most notable declines in immigrant visa issuance under the Trump administra­tion have occurred among nationals that Trump publicly disparaged or targeted specifical­ly.

Haitians for example, received 67% fewer immigrant visas between 2016 and 2019. Mainland Chinese received 35% fewer immigrant visas during that same time period.

Iranians, among the nationalit­ies that Trump’s travel ban targeted, received nearly 80% fewer immigrant visas.

Immigratio­n lawyers say the Trump administra­tion’s added protocols, which they say have included frequent “requests for evidence” or additional paperwork, as well as more interview requiremen­ts, created unnecessar­y additional bureaucrac­y without showing a demonstrab­le impact on safety. U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services also has raised processing fees and has struggled with funding shortages, and backlogs have lengthened significan­tly.

“Visa processing … is going to be very time-consuming and complicate­d,” said Ali Noorani, the chief executive of the National Immigratio­n Forum, an immigrant advocacy group, referring to the effort to unravel the Trump administra­tion’s changes.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., a Biden ally who has consulted with the Biden campaign and transition team on immigratio­n policy, said one key change will be the leadership and staffing of the Department of Homeland Security and its immigratio­n-related agencies, including U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services; leaders will need to be familiar with the department, so they will know where to make the fixes, he said. Durbin said a major priority of the new administra­tion will be unraveling hawkish Trump administra­tion policies, many of which senior adviser Stephen Miller orchestrat­ed as part of a restrictio­nist approach to immigratio­n.

“We also have to make sure we clear the decks of Miller’s acolytes in these agencies,” Durbin added.

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