El Dorado News-Times

Asylum rules test Trump’s legal skills to make new policy

- By Elliot Spagat

SAN DIEGO — Critics of the Trump administra­tion’s most sweeping set of rules to restrict asylum in the United States sent in a deluge of comments opposing the effort, hoping an old law that serves as a check on presidenti­al power will weaken or even doom it.

Opponents submitted nearly 80,000 public comments before Wednesday’s deadline, with about 20,000 in the final hours. The Trump administra­tion must address each concern in the final rules, setting itself up for legal challenges if it rushes or is careless.

“This is kind of standard administra­tive law trench warfare,” said Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western University School of Law. “It has been the case for some time that opponents of an agency action initially seek to flood the zone with comments and procedural objections as a way of slowing things down and cause a mistake, try to cause an unforced error.”

The proposal directs immigratio­n judges to be more selective about granting asylum claims and allows them to deny some without a court hearing. Its dense language describes rules President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has already tried and others that are new.

Trump has already remade much of the system for seeking humanitari­an protection in the U.S., claiming it’s rife with abuse and overwhelme­d with undeservin­g claims. But courts recently knocked down some of his efforts on procedural grounds, including his bid to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals that shields about 700,000 young people from deportatio­n.

Groups taking aim at the newest proposal focusing on immigratio­n courts urged supporters to issue comments. HIAS, a group that assists refugees, hosted a briefing for 370 people two weeks ago.

Nearly 10,000 people used a “click to comment” feature on Catholic Legal Immigratio­n Network Inc.’s website, which included a template and advice on writing effectivel­y, said Jill Marie Bussey, director of advocacy.

“These regulation­s would plunge the United States into moral darkness,” the group said in its own 101-page letter.

Under the administra­tion’s proposal, immigratio­n judges, who work for the U.S. Justice Department, could reject “legally deficient” asylum claims without a court hearing. Several new factors would weigh against asylum, including failure to pay taxes. Criminal records would still count against an asylum-seeker even if their conviction­s were expunged.

Asylum is to protect people from persecutio­n on grounds of race, religion, nationalit­y, political opinion or membership in a particular social group, a loose category that may include victims of gang or domestic violence. The regulation­s say gang members shouldn’t be considered part of a social group if they were ever recruited or targeted by gangs or because they live in country with generalize­d violence. The definition of “political opinion” is also more narrowly construed.

Michael Hethmon, senior counsel for the Immigratio­n Reform Law Institute, thinks his letter was among the few supporting the rules out of 79,339 public comments.

Herthmon wrote that most of the comments he reviewed “appear to be repetitive mass mailings” and that “comprehens­ive

reform of current dysfunctio­nal practices is urgently needed.”

Trump’s critics are hoping he trips over the Administra­tive Procedure Act, enacted in 1946 as a check on presidenti­al power in the wake of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s expansive New Deal. It requires agencies to give reasoned explanatio­ns for their actions and refrain from “arbitrary and capricious” behavior.

The U.S. Supreme Court last month refused to let the Trump administra­tion scrap DACA, citing a failure to follow procedures outlined in the 1946 law. Last year, the court prohibited a census question about citizenshi­p for similar reasons.

New York University School of Law’s Institute for Policy Integrity says the Trump administra­tion has succeeded on only 11 of 99 legal challenges to its regulatory changes, with more than half its losses on environmen­tal policy.

Bethany Davis Noll, who manages the scorecard, said success rates in previous administra­tions hovered around 70%.

Christophe­r Walker, a professor at The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law, said the Trump administra­tion’s aggressive approach is partly to blame for its relative lack of success in court.

Walker also said targeting the proposed immigratio­n rules with a massive public comment campaign wasn’t realistic because the administra­tion doesn’t have to consider repeat statements. The objective should be to build a record that demonstrat­es the government failed to consider alternativ­es.

“It’s not as much the quantity as the quality,” he said.

 ?? (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File) ?? People gather as they wait to apply for asylum in the United States on Thursday along the border in Tijuana, Mexico. In its efforts to remake the U.S. immigratio­n system, the Trump administra­tion has often stumbled over an obscure law that governs how administra­tive policies are made. Its latest test is a mammoth proposal to severely limit access to asylum, which invited nearly 80,000 public comments before the Wednesday deadline to offer feedback.
(AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File) People gather as they wait to apply for asylum in the United States on Thursday along the border in Tijuana, Mexico. In its efforts to remake the U.S. immigratio­n system, the Trump administra­tion has often stumbled over an obscure law that governs how administra­tive policies are made. Its latest test is a mammoth proposal to severely limit access to asylum, which invited nearly 80,000 public comments before the Wednesday deadline to offer feedback.

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