The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What’s next for ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy?

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The Supreme Court’s decision to order the reinstatem­ent of the “Remain in Mexico” immigratio­n policy is sparking criticism from advocacy groups and praise by former President Donald Trump. It’s also prompting promises by the Biden administra­tion to keep pushing back against a lower court’s decision to reactivate the policy, which forced people to wait in Mexico while seeking asylum in the U.S.

The high court’s decision, which came late Tuesday, said the Biden administra­tion likely violated federal law by trying to end the Trump-era program, known as the Migrant Protection Protocols. The ruling raised many questions, ranging from whether a legal challenge would prevail to the practical effects of reinstatem­ent if it stands. What’s next for the Biden administra­tion?

The Department of Homeland Security said it was taking steps to comply with the high court’s decision while the Biden administra­tion appeals.

The administra­tion could try again to end the program by having the department provide a fuller explanatio­n for its decision to end Migrant Protection Protocols.

White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki said Wednesday the administra­tion had appealed a district court decision that the Supreme Court’s order sprang from and would continue to “vigorously challenge” it.

Trump, meanwhile, welcomed the court order and said the Biden government must now reinstate “one of my most successful and important programs in securing the border.”

How is Mexico reacting?

Mexico’s Foreign Relations Department refused to say late Wednesday whether the government will allow the U.S. to reinstate the policy of sending asylum-seekers back across the border to wait for hearings on asylum claims.

Roberto Velasco, Mexico’s director for North American affairs, said the court ruling is not binding on Mexico. He stressed Mexico’s “immigratio­n policy is designed and executed in a sovereign manner.”

“The Mexican government will start technical discussion­s with the U.S. government to evaluate how to handle safe, orderly and regulated immigratio­n on the border,” Velasco said.

Mexico is not legally obligated to receive returning migrants who are not Mexican citizens, and most of the asylum-seekers

are not.

During the Trump administra­tion, the Mexican government said it was cooperatin­g with the program for humanitari­an reasons. Although migrants were granted humanitari­an visas to stay in Mexico until they had their U.S. hearings, they often had to wait in dangerous areas controlled by cartels, leaving them vulnerable to being kidnapped, assaulted, raped or even killed. Others were transporte­d by bus to parts of southern Mexico or “invited” to return to their home countries.

Mexico technicall­y could block the program by refusing to accept migrants asked to stay in Mexico under the Migrant Protection Protocols, or MPP. But analysts like Tonatiuh Guillén, former

head of Mexico’s migration agency, consider that unlikely given the country’s history of cooperatio­n with the U.S.

How robust was the program in recent years?

Immigratio­n specialist­s note that Migrant Protection Protocols already had been significan­tly scaled back during the pandemic as officials began using public health protocols to swiftly expel migrants.

The Trump administra­tion placed roughly 6,000 migrants into the program from April 2020 to January 2021

— a fraction of the more than 71,000 migrants placed into the program overall, said Bolter. It launched the program in January 2019.

“Clearly, it wasn’t operating at the level it had been operating before, but there definitely were still people being placed into it,” said Bolter. She added the program was largely being used for migrants who Mexico refused to take back under pandemic-era health protocols known as Title 42.

Victoria Neilson, managing attorney with CLINIC’S defending vulnerable population­s program, noted that since the pandemic far fewer migrants have been placed in the MPP program, with many expelled from the border under the health protocols initiated under the Trump administra­tion and continued by President Joe Biden.

What about Title 42 expulsions?

The State Department is holding talks with the Mexican government as the administra­tion reviews the Trump-era protocols to determine how they can be implemente­d while Title 42 is in effect, said a Homeland Security official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention renewed the Title 42 public health powers early this month. The administra­tion has emphasized that Title 42 is not an immigratio­n authority, but a public health authority, and its continued use is dictated by the CDC’S analysis of the public health situation.

While Title 42 expulsions continue, the U.S. for now has suspended the processing into the U.S. of people who were returned to Mexico under Migrant Protection Protocols during the Trump administra­tion.

In recent weeks, Central American migrants expelled under Title 42 have been flown by the U.S. into Mexico’s south, sparking concerns by U.N. agencies about vulnerable migrants who they say need humanitari­an protection.

The U.S. government has intermitte­ntly flown Mexicans deep into Mexico for years to discourage repeat attempts, but flights that began this month from Brownsvill­e, Texas, to the Mexican state capitals of Villahermo­sa and Tapachula, near the Guatemalan border, appear to be the first time that Central Americans have been flown deep into Mexico.

 ?? VERONICA G. CARDENAS/AP 2019 ?? On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ordered the reinstatem­ent of the “Remain in Mexico” policy, saying the Biden administra­tion likely violated federal law by trying to end the Trump-era immigratio­n program.
VERONICA G. CARDENAS/AP 2019 On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ordered the reinstatem­ent of the “Remain in Mexico” policy, saying the Biden administra­tion likely violated federal law by trying to end the Trump-era immigratio­n program.

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