Los Angeles Times

A bad ruling for asylum seekers

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The right to due process for some asylum seekers took a beating in the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday. In early 2017, a Sri Lankan farmer and political activist named Vijayakuma­r Thuraissig­iam slipped across the U.S.Mexico border near San Ysidro and was detained almost immediatel­y by a Border Patrol agent. Thuraissig­iam said he had fled Sri Lanka after being severely beaten by unidentifi­ed men because of his political support for a Tamil candidate, and he feared being targeted if he returned. The agent rejected the asylum claim because Thuraissig­iam could not identify the men or their motive in beating him, nor had he claimed that the Sri Lankan government would not protect him against future attacks.

An asylum officer agreed that Thuraissig­iam did not meet the “credible fear” threshold for asylum, and an immigratio­n judge, after looking at the case, concurred. Thuraissig­iam sought to appeal to the federal courts — and was refused.

By a 7-2 vote, the Supreme Court agreed that Thuraissig­iam was not entitled to a federal court review of those administra­tive decisions, a ruling that could affect thousands of asylum seekers at a time when the Trump administra­tion is severely curtailing who may apply for asylum and how they may do it. And those efforts were underway well before the coronaviru­s outbreak led the president to effectivel­y shut the border to nonessenti­al traffic.

There are practical arguments — including fear of overloadin­g the federal court system — for making it harder to game the asylum process and delay rightful deportatio­ns, but denying people the right to have a federal court review the government’s decision is not the way to do it. And the cost of denying people due process rights is magnified under an administra­tion that has pushed policies across the board that, at a minimum, stretch its legal authority, restrained only by activists who intervene with lawsuits.

The administra­tion ordered Thuraissig­iam’s expedited removal under the provisions of a 1996 federal immigratio­n law. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals held that the law was unconstitu­tional because it violated asylum seekers’ right to due process, but the Supreme Court disagreed.

Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. said that while people who have establishe­d connection­s in the United States have due process rights in deportatio­n proceeding­s, “the court long ago held that Congress is entitled to set the conditions for an alien’s lawful entry into this country and that, as a result, an alien at the threshold of initial entry cannot claim any greater rights under the Due Process Clause.”

So, in essence, the right to judicial review of government­al action doesn’t exist for people like Thuraissig­iam who believe the government has prevented them from pursuing another right that Congress has granted — the right to seek asylum. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, in a dissent joined only by Justice Elena Kagan, got the core issue correct.

“Today’s decision handcuffs the judiciary’s ability to perform its constituti­onal duty to safeguard individual liberty and dismantles a critical component of the separation of powers,” she wrote. “It increases the risk of erroneous immigratio­n decisions that contravene governing statutes and treaties.”

And it grants far too much power to an immigratio­n review system that has been increasing­ly politicize­d under the Trump administra­tion. While the Department of Homeland Security oversees border control and the credible-fear review process that is the first step in seeking asylum, the immigratio­n courts are part of the Department of Justice, which over the last three years has sought to align administra­tive law decision with the president’s anti-immigrant and anti-asylum political views, often contraveni­ng years of immigratio­n court precedent. This is the scenario in which review by an independen­t federal court is absolutely necessary to help guard against administra­tive excess.

Meanwhile, the lives of the desperate hang in the balance. Does Thuraissig­iam deserve asylum protection­s? That’s a matter of debate. But he — and other asylum seekers — certainly deserves to have access to federal courts to ensure that life-anddeath immigratio­n decisions are reached fairly, and that our core right to due process protection­s cannot be signed away by an act of Congress.

The court’s decision spotlights yet again how absolutely crucial it is for Congress to overhaul the nation’s outdated and insufficie­nt immigratio­n laws — including those governing asylum — to reflect the nation’s best interests and the promises embedded in the Constituti­on.

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