The Day

Abject cruelty: Deporting 60,000 Haitians

- The Washington Post

Forcing these immigrants back to Haiti would help how? Splitting up families? Uprooting children who know no home but the United States? The hardship on those Haitians is immense, while the “benefit” to the United States is nonexisten­t.

The Washington Post reports:

“The Trump administra­tion has given nearly 60,000 Haitians with provisiona­l legal residency in the United States 18 months to leave, announcing Monday that it will not renew the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) that has allowed them to remain in this country for more than seven years. The decision came after the Department of Homeland Security determined that the ‘extraordin­ary conditions’ justifying their presence in the United States following a 2010 earthquake ‘no longer exist,’ a senior administra­tion official said. . . . Successive administra­tions have regularly renewed their status, and many of the Haitians have U.S.-born children.”

Florida, which has also seen a huge influx of Puerto Ricans, has more than half of the Haitians at issue. (“[Florida] lawmakers had asked that [the Haitians] be allowed to remain. The lawmakers cited ongoing economic and political difficulti­es in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, as well as a still-raging cholera epidemic.”)

There is no particular need — aside from red meat for the anti-immigrant base — to expel these law-abiding people who have made their home here for as long as seven years. Florida’s unemployme­nt rate of 4.1 percent does not suggest that they have displaced U.S.-born workers. And the notion that these people can return to Haiti to enjoy a decent life is belied by the facts on the ground there. As the Chicago Tribune reports, “While Haiti has made advances spurred by internatio­nal aid since the quake, it remains one of the poorest nations in the world. More than 2.5 million people, roughly a quarter of the population, live on less than $1.23 a day, which authoritie­s there consider extreme poverty.”

The lack of humanity is evident in the administra­tion’s anti-family action. “The senior official who briefed reporters said that the 18-month ‘wind-down’ period for the Haitians was enough time to allow families with U.S.-born children to make decisions about what to do, and make arrangemen­ts,” the Post reports.

What would those arrangemen­ts be? Splitting up families? Uprooting children who know no home but the United States? The hardship on those Haitians is immense, while the “benefit” to the United States is nonexisten­t.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., pleaded for relief in a recent op-ed:

“That’s why I continue to urge the administra­tion to extend Haiti’s TPS designatio­n for 18 more months. As Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommitt­ee on the Western Hemisphere and as a member of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, I continue to strongly support U.S. initiative­s that promote good governance and security, combat poverty and health epidemics, and advance economic opportunit­ies for the people of Haiti.”

His plea ignored, Rubio now must decide whether to make this a “must include” issue to resolve in next month’s budget deal. If he really cares about the issue, Rubio can use the spending bill as a vehicle to spare the Haitians from deportatio­n.

Democrats are focused on “getting business leaders to realize the disruption to labor markets if 58,000 Haitians are required to leave will increase public pressure on Trump to grant the TPS extension,” the Miami Herald reports.

“If all the Haitian workers at Fort Lauderdale Internatio­nal Airport left tomorrow, they would have the messiest bathrooms of any airport,” said Rep. Alcee Hastings, D-Fla.

Voters in Florida should make their objections heard, especially in the 2018 midterms, by supporting candidates who pledge to reverse the decision.

TPS, coupled with the DACA reversal and the Trump administra­tion’s other anti-immigrant gambits, may well figure in the 2018 elections. One GOP House seat (Fla-27) is already leaning Democratic while the Florida 26th is a good pick-up chance for the Democrats. Florida also has a Senate and gubernator­ial race in 2018. As in Virginia, voters frustrated with the Republican­s’ divisive brand of politics could well decide to throw them out so they can keep their neighbors, friends and colleagues.

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