Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Texas files suit over asylum rule’s app

It’s encouragin­g crossers, state says

- REBECCA SANTANA

The state of Texas is suing the Biden administra­tion in an attempt to have a newly-introduced asylum rule thrown out, saying a phone app used by migrants to set up appointmen­ts at the border to seek entry into the United States is encouragin­g illegal immigratio­n.

The lawsuit filed Tuesday is the latest legal salvo attacking various aspects of the administra­tion’s plan to manage migration in the aftermath of the end of a key pandemic-era immigratio­n regulation called Title 42.

In the lawsuit, Texas argues that the asylum rule encourages the use of a cellphone app — called CBP One — for migrants who don’t have proper documentat­ion to make an appointmen­t to come to a port of entry and seek entry into the United States.

Texas argues the Biden administra­tion is essentiall­y encouragin­g people to come to the U.S. even though they don’t have legal basis to stay.

“The Biden Administra­tion deliberate­ly conceived of this phone app with the goal of illegally pre-approving more foreign aliens to enter the country and go where they please once they arrive,” said Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in a news release.

The complaint was filed in the Western District of Texas.

In a statement Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security said Texas’ lawsuit would actually create disorder, not alleviate it and that the app was part of measures that have helped reduce unlawful immigratio­n by more than 70% since Title 42 ended.

“Lawful pathways like making an appointmen­t to appear at a port of entry using the CBP One app allow us to process migrants in a safe, orderly, and humane way and reduce unlawful immigratio­n. This is particular­ly critical at a time when Congress has failed to reform our broken immigratio­n system,” the department said.

While the lawsuit focuses on the phone app, it seeks to throw out the entire asylum rule, called the Circumvent­ion of Lawful Pathways.

The rule went into effect when Title 42 expired May 11.

The rule makes it extremely difficult for migrants who travel to the southern border to get asylum if they don’t first seek protection in a country they passed through before reaching the U.S. or if they don’t apply online through the app.

Use of the app is a core part of the administra­tion’s plans to create a more orderly system at the border where migrants set up appointmen­ts ahead of time, but when the app was rolled out in January it was criticized for technologi­cal problems and because demand has far outstrippe­d available spaces.

Migrants can make appointmen­ts for specific ports of entry — five of which are in Texas.

Texas argues that according to federal law, people entering the country illegally — with rare exceptions — should be expelled but that the app doesn’t verify whether the migrants seeking appointmen­ts would qualify for exceptions. Therefore, the state argues, the Biden administra­tion’s use of the app essentiall­y encourages people to come to the U.S. even if they don’t qualify. Texas also argues that it has to pay a financial burden of migrants coming to the U.S. through providing services such as health care or education.

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