Los Angeles Times

Treat migrants like people

Biden can unwind Trump’s despicable immigratio­n policies by executive action, even without Congress

- By Nicole Hallett Nicole Hallett is an associate clinical professor of law and director of the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic at the University of Chicago Law School.

Of all the promises Donald Trump made during the 2016 campaign, his pledge to crack down on immigratio­n is the one he has come closest to keeping. Since the beginning, the Trump administra­tion has taken a sledgehamm­er to immigratio­n policy. The right to asylum viciously attacked. Human rights abuses f lourishing in the immigratio­n detention system. Legal immigratio­n slowed to a crawl. The Muslim ban. The effort to end DACA. Family separation at the border. The list goes on.

Fortunatel­y, Joe Biden has the power to reverse those policies when he takes office in January. Because Trump used executive action to carry out his immigratio­n agenda, Biden can unwind it in the same way — even without the cooperatio­n of Congress.

Recent news reports suggest that Biden plans to take swift action to reinstate the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, known as DACA, repeal the Muslim ban and end the “Remain in Mexico” program that has left asylum seekers languishin­g in refugee camps across the U. S.- Mexico border. But a lot of the damage done to the system was through hundreds of smaller immigratio­n policy changes that did not receive much public or press notice even though they did enormous harm to immigrants.

The Biden administra­tion can end some of these policies with the stroke of a pen. For instance, it can stop threatenin­g human traffickin­g victims with deportatio­n if their applicatio­ns for U and T visas for crime victims are denied. Similarly, policies requiring Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to make “collateral arrests”— people ICE is not targeting but encounter during enforcemen­t actions — and prohibitin­g ICE from exercising discretion in deportatio­n proceeding­s could also be changed immediatel­y.

Biden’s attorney general will also be able to reverse some of the changes using his or her authority to issue decisions interpreti­ng immigratio­n law. For example, the new attorney general could reverse decisions issued by former Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions that made it next to impossible for domestic violence victims to win asylum and prohibited immigratio­n judges from managing their dockets to give immigrants time to apply for green cards through family members.

Other policies will require formal rule- making to change. The Biden Department of Homeland Security should, for example, revise a regulation that greatly limits the ability of asylum seekers to obtain work authorizat­ion while they wait for their applicatio­n to be adjudicate­d in the overburden­ed system. It should also rescind another regulation that expanded the use of expedited removal to allow many undocument­ed immigrants to be deported without a hearing.

What will be harder to repair is the department’s culture of lawlessnes­s, which has grown worse in the Trump era. The Obama administra­tion struggled to get ICE and Border Patrol to carry out its policy objectives. Indeed, the ICE union even sued the Obama administra­tion over DACA, alleging that it required immigratio­n agents to violate their duty to enforce immigratio­n laws. The Trump administra­tion, on the other hand, has encouraged rule- breaking, and Homeland Security employees took full advantage of the lack of oversight and standards of conduct. The result is an agency that has repeatedly violated people’s rights in the name of immigratio­n enforcemen­t and then lies about it in court.

It will be difficult for the incoming political appointees to reestablis­h rule of law, but they must try. It seems unlikely that Biden will “abolish ICE,” but he must think strategica­lly about how to reform the department.

Even if he successful­ly unwinds Trump’s policy changes and puts in new leadership to alter Homeland Security culture, we would still be left with the immigratio­n system that existed during the Obama years, which was far from perfect. While the Obama administra­tion advanced some pro- immigrant policies by executive action — DACA and the enforcemen­t priorities that focused ICE attention on immigrants with criminal records being the most wellknown examples — he also oversaw more than 3 million deportatio­ns. Far too many avoidable tragedies were allowed to occur. And of course, that administra­tion and allies in Congress failed to pass desperatel­y needed comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.

A Republican Senate will make it difficult to get an immigratio­n reform bill through Congress, but Biden has other tools at his disposal. For example, there are millions of undocument­ed immigrants who would be eligible to apply for green cards except that they were not “admitted or paroled” into the country. Their only option now is to return home and endure a lengthy waiver process that can keep them separated from their family for years. Biden could use his parole power to “parole in place” these individual­s so that they can apply for green cards without leaving the country.

He could also drasticall­y reduce the number of immigrants in lockup by using alternativ­es to detention such as ankle monitors. He could reform immigratio­n courts through administra­tive rule- making so that they provide a real, independen­t check on Homeland Security’s deportatio­n power. These actions wouldn’t replace comprehens­ive legislativ­e reform, but they would help mitigate some of the cruelest aspects of the current system.

Despite Trump’s demonizati­on of immigrants, public opinion is becoming more pro- immigratio­n. A majority of Americans now believe that it should be easier to get asylum in the U. S. and support a path to citizenshi­p for undocument­ed immigrants. More Americans want an increase in immigratio­n rather than a decrease. The last four years have shown the public just how cruel and inhumane the broken immigratio­n system can be. It is now Biden’s job to fix it.

 ?? Eric Gay Associated Press ?? A CHILD at a camp in Matamoros, Mexico, for people seeking asylum in the United States.
Eric Gay Associated Press A CHILD at a camp in Matamoros, Mexico, for people seeking asylum in the United States.

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