Dayton Daily News

U.S. may cap refugees below 50,000

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The Trump WASHINGTON — administra­tion is considerin­g reducing the number of refugees admitted to the country over the next year to below 50,000, the lowest number since at least 1980, according to current and former government officials familiar with the discussion­s.

President Donald Trump promised during his 2016 campaign to deny admittance to refugees who posed a terrorist threat. In his first days in office he took steps to radically reduce the program that resettles refugees in U.S. cities and towns, capping the number admitted at 50,000 as part of his executive order banning travel from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries. That was fewer than half the 110,000 refugees President Barack Obama said should be admitted in 2016.

But in recent weeks, as the deadline approached for Trump to issue the annual determinat­ion for refugee admissions required by the Refugee Act of 1980, some inside the White House — led by Stephen Miller, Trump’s senior adviser for policy — have pressed to set the ceiling even lower.

The issue has created an intense debate within the administra­tion, with Miller and some officials at the Department of Homeland Security citing security concerns and limited resources as grounds for deeply cutting the number of admissions, and officials at the National Security Council, the State Department and the Department of Defense opposing a precipitou­s drop.

No decision has been made, according to the officials, but as the issue is being debated, the Supreme Court on Tuesday allowed the administra­tion to bar almost any refugees from entering the country while the justices consider challenges to the travel ban order. The court will hear arguments in the case next month.

Spokesmen at the White House and the department­s of Homeland Security and State declined to discuss an annual figure, noting that it had not yet been finalized. By law, the president must consult Congress and make a decision on the refugee ceiling by the start of each fiscal year, Oct. 1.

Miller, the principal architect of Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n policies, has been the most vocal proponent at the White House for reducing the number of admissions far below the 50,000 stipulated in the travel ban, at one point advocating a level as low as 15,000, the officials said. An aide to Attorney General Jeff Sessions when he was in the Senate, Miller has inserted himself in a policy process that is typically led by the State Department and coordinate­d by the National Security Council.

This year, the Department of Homeland Security is dominating the discussion­s, and the Domestic Policy Council, which reports to Miller, has coordinate­d the process. In a meeting on the topic at the White House on Tuesday, Homeland Security officials recommende­d a limit of 40,000, according to officials familiar with the discussion­s who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are private.

One senior administra­tion official involved in the internal debate over refugees described the move to curtail admissions as part of a broader rethinking of how the United States deals with migrants, based on the idea that it is more effective and affordable to help displaced people outside the nation’s borders than within them.

Still, the prospect of capping refugee admissions below 50,000 has alarmed people both inside and outside the administra­tion, given the refugee crisis unfolding around the world and the United States’ history of taking a leadership position in accepting people fleeing violence and persecutio­n.

“When you get down to some of the numbers that are being talked about, you get down to a program of really nugatory levels,” said David Miliband, the former British foreign secretary who is president of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, said in an interview. “It’s not an exaggerati­on to say the very existence of refugee resettleme­nt as a core aspect of the American story, and America’s role as a global leader in this area, is at stake.”

Miliband’s group is one of nine organizati­ons — most of them religious groups — that work with the government to resettle refugees in the United States and are pressing for the admission of at least 75,000 refugees over the next year.

Two administra­tion officials said those pushing for a lower number are citing the need to strengthen the process of vetting applicants for refugee status to prevent would-be terrorists from entering the country. Two others said another factor is a cold-eyed assessment of the money and resources that would be needed to resettle larger amounts of refugees at a time when federal immigratio­n authoritie­s already face a yearslong backlog of hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers.

Mark Krikorian, the executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, a Washington-based research organizati­on that advocates less immigratio­n, said the program represents a poor allocation of limited resources and should be reserved for the most extreme of cases.

“There’s no real, moral justificat­ion for resettling large numbers of refugees,” said Krikorian, adding that his group’s research shows that resettling a refugee from the Middle East in the United States costs 12 times as much as what the United Nations estimates it would cost to care for the person in the region. “Refugee resettleme­nt is just a way of making ourselves feel better.”

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 ?? DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? In recent weeks, Stephen Miller, President Donald Trump’s senior adviser for policy, has pressed the president to set his refugee admission ceiling lower than his planned 50,000, the lowest number since at least 1980.
DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES In recent weeks, Stephen Miller, President Donald Trump’s senior adviser for policy, has pressed the president to set his refugee admission ceiling lower than his planned 50,000, the lowest number since at least 1980.

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