Los Angeles Times

A non-solution at the border

Throwing kids behind bars with their parents isn’t a whole lot better than separating them.

- He nation

Tshould be thankful that President Trump finally came to his senses and ended the inhumane and traumatizi­ng practice of separating children from their immigrant parents who illegally enter the United States. Facing an extraordin­ary backlash not just from Democrats but from some Republican­s, every living former first lady (and, amazingly, the current one), United Nations human rights officials, Willie Nelson, Pope Francis and many, many others who reacted in dismay to scenes of children corralled in metal cages, Trump probably had little choice.

But his solution — detaining entire families together while the adults face, in most cases, misdemeano­r charges of illegal entry — raises enormously troubling problems of its own. Innocent children do not belong in jails or detention centers, as a 20-year-old federal consent decree acknowledg­es.

The congressio­nal Republican­s and Christian conservati­ves who spoke out against separating children from parents — more than 2,300 have been separated — deserve acknowledg­ment for finally drawing a line, though it is dishearten­ing that it took a policy as cruel and damaging as ripping children from their parents’ arms to finally get them to stand up to the administra­tion.

Of course, the president’s change of heart also put the lie to his assertions, echoed by underlings such as Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, that loopholes in immigratio­n laws and court decisions made the separation­s necessary. They did not. It was Sessions’ “zero tolerance” policy decision to charge all suspected illegal border crossers with crimes and detain them pending court action. Though entering the U.S. without permission is a misdemeano­r, no law requires the government to prosecute every violation. Nor does the government have to detain the border crossers, which is what led to the family separation­s. The administra­tion chose to do that.

Under Trump’s new policy, the zero-tolerance arrests will continue, but the government apparently will keep the families together in detention — in direct violation of the 1997 Flores consent decree that says the government cannot hold undocument­ed children in detention centers for more than 20 days, with or without their parents. In fact, during the surge of unaccompan­ied minors and families fleeing violence in Central America, the Obama administra­tion detained entire families to try to deter others from making the dangerous trip from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, where violent gangs have terrorized neighborho­ods. The administra­tion ended the policy in the face of political backlash and court orders. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals eventually ruled that while the Flores agreement does not require parents to be released, it does bar the government from keeping the children in detention.

In his order, Trump said he intends to ask the court to revise the Flores settlement to allow for longer family detentions. The court should rebuff that. The goal here is to keep the families together — but not by violating a rule that was designed to set rational and compassion­ate immigratio­n detention standards for children. The better solution is to stop the over-reliance on incarcerat­ion. Unless there is a valid belief that the parents pose a threat, they should be released along with their children, with steps taken to ensure they will return for their court dates. Those steps can include electronic monitoring through ankle bracelets and other techniques.

It’s notable that the president, who repeatedly said it would be up to Congress to change laws to end the family separation­s, ultimately decided for his own political expediency to issue his executive order even as bills barring family separation­s were being introduced. We’re glad the president didn’t wait for the glacially slow Congress to act, which would have repeated the error he made in ending Obama-era protection­s for “Dreamers” and then telling Congress to save the program legislativ­ely. Trump can undo that executive decision, too.

But the president is right that Congress should — really, must — address its twodecade impasse over how to fix the nation’s dysfunctio­nal immigratio­n laws and enforcemen­t system. In fact, some efforts to push reform legislatio­n are currently underway, but Congress should be wary of using the crisis of family separation­s as blackmail to force through the kinds of draconian policies pushed by hard-liners like Trump advisor Stephen Miller, who seek to severely reduce legal immigratio­n. What the U.S. needs is a fair and humane bipartisan immigratio­n overhaul that addresses the complicate­d but solvable issues that have divided the country for too long.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States