Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Low refugee cap stirs outcry; Biden reverses

President to lift Trump’s 15,000 ceiling after all

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Friday all but abandoned a pledge to enable tens of thousands of refugees fleeing danger abroad to come to the United States this year, then abruptly backtracke­d after drawing a furious response from human-rights advocates and fellow Democrats.

In a directive issued early Friday, the administra­tion announced that it would leave the cap on refugees at 15,000, the record-low ceiling set by President Donald Trump. But after hours of criticism from allies, White House press secretary Jen Psaki reversed the announceme­nt, issuing an unusual statement saying the order had been “the subject of some confusion.”

Psaki said Biden would actually set the final cap — which sets the refugee allotment through the end of September — by May 15, and that while the White House expects it will be higher than Trump’s ceiling, it was “unlikely” to rise to the 62,500 that Biden had put forward with some fanfare in February.

Psaki said Biden could not keep that promise because the Trump administra­tion had “decimated” the refugee program. But advocates dis

missed that explanatio­n, saying the Biden team was more likely seeking to abandon the pledge over concerns about the political criticism surroundin­g the current surge of migrants at the southern border.

“It’s deeply disappoint­ing that the administra­tion elected to leave in place the shameful record low of its predecesso­r,” said Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, president and chief executive of the Lutheran Immigratio­n and Refugee Service, a resettleme­nt agency working with the government.

Biden’s new decree — known formally as an emergency presidenti­al determinat­ion — did move away from Trump-era policies by changing the regional allocation of refugees. Under Trump’s directive, strict restrictio­ns were placed on accepting refugees from certain African and majority-Muslim countries.

The maneuverin­g reflected growing concern at the White House about immigratio­n, according to people with knowledge of the decision-making process, who cited worries about expanding the refugee program at a moment when critics are pummeling Biden with claims that he is too soft in his policies and rhetoric. The president is struggling to contain the soaring number of migrants arriving at the southern border, which has caused significan­t anxiety in the West Wing, according to people with knowledge of the situation.

Some of those people pointed to Ron Klain, Biden’s chief of staff, as a driving force behind the president’s announceme­nt that he would keep the Trump-era caps. A senior administra­tion official denied that Klain engineered the initial decision and said instead that the chief of staff was a driving force behind Psaki’s clarificat­ion. All these officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberati­ons.

Biden’s long-delayed decision-making has resulted in hundreds of canceled flights for refugees, including a pregnant mother who missed the window to travel, and it has cast into limbo many people who had organized their lives around coming to the United States after Biden signaled a new direction, according to advocates and Democratic lawmakers.

Biden’s directive Friday was greeted with anger from Democrats and leaders of the resettleme­nt agencies that work with the government, some of whom equated his approach to Trump’s. The decision prompted the most forceful denunciati­ons from his own party that Biden has experience­d as president.

“This Biden Administra­tion refugee admissions target is unacceptab­le. These refugees can wait years for their chance and go through extensive vetting. Thirty-five thousand are ready. Facing the greatest refugee crisis in our time there is no reason to limit the number to 15,000,” Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois, the second-ranking Senate Democrat and a close Biden ally, said in a statement. “Say it ain’t so, President Joe.”

For all the furor, the political effect of Biden’s move was unclear. While he met criticism from Democrats, some conservati­ves suggested that the impulse to hold off on a dramatic increase in refugees showed sensitivit­y to the politics of immigratio­n.

“This reflects Team Biden’s awareness that the border flood will cause record midterm losses *if* GOP keeps issue front & center,” tweeted Stephen Miller, a chief architect of Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n platform.

Republican­s who have struggled to dent Biden’s popularity when it comes to his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and the economy have increasing­ly focused on immigratio­n, suggesting the president has botched the situation on the border and is responsibl­e for an influx of migrants that is hard to control.

Biden’s revised regional allocation­s provide more slots for refugees from Africa, the Middle East and Central America and lift Trump’s restrictio­ns on resettleme­nts from Somalia, Syria and Yemen. While those moves garnered some praise, they were drowned out by the chorus of Democrats from across the political spectrum who lambasted the president’s decision and raised concerns about whether Biden would fulfill his commitment to lift the cap on refugees to 125,000 beginning in October.

LIBERAL OUTCRY

Underlying the stormy reaction was the feeling among Democrats that harshness toward migrants and refugees was central to what they disliked about Trump. Biden was expected to usher in a return to a more welcoming United States, one that provided a haven for suffering and persecuted people from around the world.

To some Democrats, Biden’s initial decision Friday seemed to contradict that promise as well as the president’s rhetoric promising a more tolerant country.

Before Friday’s announceme­nt, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez, D-N.J., prepared a letter to Biden urging him to lift Trump’s refugee cap expeditiou­sly and warning that the delay had already had “serious repercussi­ons.” Menendez called the 15,000 limit “appallingl­y low.”

Menendez was joined by prominent liberal lawmakers. “There are simply no excuses for today’s disgracefu­l decision,” tweeted Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., who lived in a refugee camp in Kenya as a child after her family fled civil war in Somalia.

“Completely and utterly unacceptab­le,” added Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., a naturalize­d citizen who was born in India, issued a blistering statement calling Biden’s move “unconscion­able.”

The White House acknowledg­ed that the turbulent situation on the border played a role its decision-making process, citing the demands it has placed on the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt.

“We have to ensure that there is capacity and ability to manage both,” said Psaki under questionin­g during a briefing, referring to the border surge and the refugee pressures. White House officials said the pandemic and the challenge of rebuilding a system the previous administra­tion shredded were also factors.

But representa­tives of resettleme­nt agencies working with the government were not convinced by these explanatio­ns, pointing out that the refugee system is entirely distinct from the arrangemen­t used to process would-be migrants at the border. Jenny Yang, vice president for advocacy and policy at World Relief, said the White House’s reasons amounted to a “completely faulty excuse.”

The U.S. refugee program is aimed at people displaced from their countries because of severe conditions such as genocide, civil war, and other political, religious or racial persecutio­n. Admission is a multistep process that begins outside the United States. That is in contrast to the asylum program, which allows migrants to apply upon arriving at the border.

Refugees go through a vetting process that can take years. Once approved, they are often paired with organizati­ons that work to arrange transport and resettleme­nt in the United States. Until the Trump era, the United States regularly resettled tens of thousands of refugees annually and led the world in accepting them.

Presidents have broad leeway in administer­ing the program. While they must notify congressio­nal leaders of their plans, they do not need their approval to set annual caps on how many refugees the U.S. can take in. Biden delivered a speech at the State Department on Feb. 4 in which he announced his intention to move sharply away from Trump’s strict policies.

“It’s going to take time to rebuild what has been so badly damaged,” he said then. He announced that he would raise the annual cap on refugee admissions to 125,000 for the next fiscal year and move swiftly toward a “down payment” soon.

On Feb. 12, the State Department submitted a report to Congress on the president’s proposal for the rest of the fiscal year, which would override Trump’s directive. The report, the culminatio­n of an interagenc­y process including the State Department, the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Health and Human Services, outlined how the Biden administra­tion wanted to raise the refugee cap to 62,500 people.

In the past, signing the emergency declaratio­n has been viewed as a formality, as the report reflects the consensus of the three agencies responsibl­e for refugees. But Biden never signed the declaratio­n, and people familiar with the process said they could not recall a time when a president enacted a presidenti­al determinat­ion that was different from the report to Congress.

In early March, the State Department had to cancel flights it had booked to bring approved refugees to the country because Biden had not yet signed the presidenti­al determinat­ion. The flights, people with knowledge of the situation said, reflected the department’s expectatio­n that Biden would quickly sign the order to lift the cap.

BIPARTISAN PRIORITY

The United States has accepted more than 3 million refugees since 1980, according to the State Department. That system has a history that defies political labels. Many resettleme­nt agencies are religiousl­y based, including some sponsored by evangelica­l Christians and mainstream denominati­ons, alongside nonpartisa­n charitable groups.

Refugee resettleme­nt has been a bipartisan priority for decades and at times has included strong ideologica­l overtones, such as a Republican-backed program to resettle large numbers of Soviet Jews during the Cold War.

According to a report released recently by the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, the Biden administra­tion has admitted only 2,050 refugees at the halfway point of this fiscal year and is on pace to accept the lowest annual number of refugees of any modern president.

Biden’s backtrack is in contrast to many other areas of foreign policy and national security where the new president has pointedly reversed Trump, arguing that the United States should be a moral and humanitari­an leader for the world.

David Miliband, president and CEO of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, said Biden has not fulfilled his promise to restore America’s leadership as a safe haven for the world’s oppressed. “This leadership is sorely needed,” he said.

“This is incredibly disappoint­ing. The U.S. is the most powerful nation in the world and we can’t do better?” said Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigratio­n Forum.

The White House acknowledg­ed that the turbulent situation on the border played a role its decisionma­king process, citing the demands it has placed on the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt.

 ?? (AP/Andrew Harnik) ?? White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the Trump administra­tion had “decimated” the refugee program, making it “unlikely” that President Joe Biden would be able to set a final cap on refugees at 62,500 that he had announced in February.
(AP/Andrew Harnik) White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the Trump administra­tion had “decimated” the refugee program, making it “unlikely” that President Joe Biden would be able to set a final cap on refugees at 62,500 that he had announced in February.
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