Las Vegas Review-Journal

Union: Plan could force asylum officers to break law

- Los Angeles Times By Hamed Aleaziz

President Joe Biden’s plan to limit some migrants’ access to asylum could force federal asylum officers to break U.S. law, the union that represents asylum officers argued Monday in a formal filing opposing the proposal.

Enforcing Biden’s policy would violate asylum officers’ oath to carry out the immigratio­n laws set out by Congress and “could make them complicit in violations of U.S. and internatio­nal law,” attorneys for the American Federation of Government Employees Council 119 wrote in a comment submitted to the Department of Homeland Security.

The same union regularly protested the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to restrict asylum at the southern U.S. border, including by joining lawsuits that sought to block his policies.

“At their core, the measures that the Proposed Rule seeks to implement are inconsiste­nt with the asylum law enacted by Congress, the treaties the United States has ratified, and our country’s moral fabric and longstandi­ng tradition of providing safe haven to the persecuted,” the union argued. “Rather, it is draconian and represents the elevation of a single policy goal — reducing the number of migrants crossing the southwest border — over human life and our country’s commitment to refugees.”

Biden’s plan, unveiled in February, is his latest attempt to deter migrants from entering the U.S. without authorizat­ion.

If enacted, it would make immigrants who cross into the U.S. without permission and fail to apply for protection­s on the way to the southern border ineligible for asylum.

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