Los Angeles Times

Justices allow Trump’s ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy

Supreme Court votes to keep in place rules forcing asylum seekers to wait across the border for hearings.

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday granted another emergency appeal from the Trump administra­tion and voted to keep in place the “Remain in Mexico” policy that has forced tens of thousands of asylum seekers to stay on the Mexican side of the border while they await a hearing in the United States.

The justices in a one-line order put on hold a ruling by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals two weeks ago that declared the disputed policy illegal.

Only one member of the court registered a dissent. Justice Sonia Sotomayor said she voted to turn down the government’s appeal.

The high court’s action, while not a final ruling, is a significan­t victory for the Trump administra­tion and its hard-line policies on immigratio­n and asylum. It will maintain the Remain in Mexico policy for at least three months and probably through early next year. The justices are likely to grant review of the case when Trump’s lawyers submit an appeal petition in June.

The Justice Department said in a statement that it was gratified by the court’s decision and that the policy has been “critical to restoring the government’s ability to manage the Southwest border and to work cooperativ­ely with the Mexican government to address illegal immigratio­n.”

Immigrant rights advocates call the policy cruel, inhumane and illegal. They say it has left thousands of people stranded along the border without food, housing, healthcare or protection from criminals, where they wait weeks or even months for a hearing to present their asylum claims.

Judy Rabinovitz, special counsel in the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project, said the high court should rule the policy is illegal. “Asylum seekers face grave danger and irreversib­le harm every day this depraved policy remains in effect,” she said.

Over the last three years, Solicitor Gen. Noel Francisco

has repeatedly sent emergency appeals on behalf of the Trump administra­tion to the high court, relying on its conservati­ve majority to put on hold decisions by liberal judges in California who rule against President Trump’s policies.

On Friday, he asked the justices to intervene in the Remain in Mexico case and prevent what he said would be “a rush on the border” by thousands of migrants reacting to the 9th Circuit’s decision.

The solicitor general said the policy, officially known as Migrant Protection Protocols, has proved to be an “enormously effective and indispensa­ble tool” to cope with “the humanitari­an and security crisis” at the southern border.

He told the justices that before the policy was put in place, about 2,000 migrants had been arriving daily at the southern border seeking to enter the United States and apply for asylum. Moreover, he said the “vast majority” of them did not have strong claims that they were fleeing government-sponsored political persecutio­n in their Central American homelands.

To stem the flow of migrants, administra­tion lawyers seized on one provision in a 1996 immigratio­n law that said the attorney general “may return the alien” to “a foreign territory contiguous to the United States” to await a hearing there.

The legal dispute turned on whether this provision applies broadly to all arriving immigrants, as Trump’s lawyers maintain, or instead only to certain “extremely undesirabl­e” immigrants, such as drug trafficker­s and smugglers, as the 9th Circuit held.

The Remain in Mexico policy was put into effect in January 2019. Since then, “it has enabled the temporary return of over 60,000 aliens to Mexico,” the solicitor general said in arguing the appeal, known as Chad Wolf, acting secretary of Homeland Security vs. Innovation Law Lab.

Immigrant rights lawyers filed suit in San Francisco, and in April of last year, U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg handed down a nationwide preliminar­y injunction to block the policy.

But a month later, a 9th Circuit Court panel lifted that temporary order. Lawyers then went back to court arguing that the administra­tion was exceeding its authority under the immigratio­n laws.

A different panel of the 9th Circuit, by a 2-1 vote, agreed with that argument on Feb. 28. Judges William Fletcher and Richard Paez said the “return-to-a-contiguous-territory provision” in the immigratio­n law had always been understood to apply to only a small category of “other aliens,” not to the thousands of immigrants who arrive at the borders.

They also said the policy violated U.S. duties under internatio­nal treaties because it sent asylum seekers back to areas where they would be subject to torture and persecutio­n.

Just hours after handing down the broad opinion, the 9th Circuit panel agreed to put its own ruling on hold until March 12 so the administra­tion could appeal to the Supreme Court.

On Monday, lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union had urged the court to reject the appeal. They said the administra­tion had adopted “an unpreceden­ted policy that fundamenta­lly changed the nation’s asylum system” and “returned more than 60,000 asylum seekers to Mexico, where they are exposed to kidnapping, assault, rape and other violent attacks.”

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? SALVADORAN Henry Jose Juarez says he fell down an embankment last year after he was struck by a tear gas canister launched by the U.S. Border Patrol. He was living in a Tijuana shelter with other asylum seekers.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times SALVADORAN Henry Jose Juarez says he fell down an embankment last year after he was struck by a tear gas canister launched by the U.S. Border Patrol. He was living in a Tijuana shelter with other asylum seekers.

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