San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)
Countries must revamp asylum, Trump aide says
One of President Trump’s top priorities on immigration if he wins a second term would be to use agreements with Central American governments as models to get countries around the world to field asylum claims from people seeking refuge in the United States.
Stephen Miller, a key architect of Trump’s immigration policies, said the agreements would help stop “asylum fraud, asylum shopping and asylum abuse on a global scale.”
Miller, in an interview with the Associated Press on Friday, also forecast a broader offensive against socalled “sanctuary” jurisdictions that limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities, saying the administration would use its “full power, resources and authority.”
He vowed more efforts toward legal immigration “based on merit.”
The “Asylum Cooperative Agreements” that the administration struck in 2019 have allowed for asylum seekers from El Salvador and Honduras to be flown to Guatemala for an opportunity to seek asylum, denying them a chance to apply in the U. S.
From November to March, when the coronavirus pandemic halted flights to Guatemala, only 20 of 939 Hondurans and El Salvadorans flown there sought asylum. Nearly all went home in what became known as “deportation with a layover.”
Like many of Trump’s policies that have dramatically transformed the U. S. immigration system, the bilateral agreements are being challenged in court. Critics note asylumseekers are sent to countries with high levels of violence and poverty and little infrastructure to handle asylum claims. Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden have given scant attention to immigration in their 2020 campaigns, despite a spirited exchange during Thursday’s debate that was prompted by news that courtappointed lawyers have been unable to find parents of 545 children who were separated from their families early in the Trump administration.
Trump has yet to outline secondterm immigration priorities in detail, though he has openly toyed with trying to repeal a constitutional right to citizenship for anyone born in the United States.
Biden has pledged to undo many, but not all, of Trump’s policies and restore Obama administration hallmarks, like shielding from deportation “dreamers” who came to the U. S. as young children and narrowing deportation efforts to focus more on people with criminal records. With the pandemic and other issues, it is unclear how much appetite Biden would have to tackle all that Trump has done.
Biden, on his campaign website, is silent about the asylum agreements that the Trump administration struck with Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador last year but says he will end “detrimental” policies, including a cornerstone Trump effort to make asylumseekers wait in Mexico for hearings in U. S. immigration court.
Administration officials have discussed adding countries from Africa and Asia to create a global web of accords resembling those with Central American governments. Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador were under heavy U. S. pressure to acquiesce last year, with Trump threatening at times to cut off international aid.
Such agreements could potentially be proposed to countries that send large numbers of asylumseekers to the United States, such as Cameroon or China.
Miller said the administration would continue its efforts to redefine criteria for legal immigration, which are now largely based on family ties.