The News-Times

Trump plans to slash refugee admissions to record low

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SAN DIEGO — The Trump administra­tion has proposed further slashing the number of refugees the United States accepts to a new record low in the coming year.

In a notice sent to Congress late Wednesday, just 34 minutes before a statutory deadline to do so, the administra­tion said it intended to admit a maximum of 15,000 refugees in fiscal year 2021. That’s 3,000 fewer than the 18,000 ceiling the administra­tion had set for fiscal year 2020, which expired at midnight Wednesday.

The proposal will now be reviewed by Congress, where there are strong objections to the cuts, but lawmakers will be largely powerless to force changes.

The more than 16.5 percent reduction was announced shortly after President Donald Trump vilified refugees as an unwanted burden at a campaign rally in Duluth, Minnesota, where he assailed his opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden. He claimed Biden wants to flood the state with foreigners.

“Biden will turn Minnesota into a refugee camp, and he said that — overwhelmi­ng public resources, overcrowdi­ng schools and inundating hospitals. You know that. It’s already there. It’s a disgrace what they’ve done to your state,” Trump told supporters.

Trump froze refugee admissions in March amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, citing a need to protect American jobs as fallout from the coronaviru­s crashed the economy.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the administra­tion is committed to the country’s history of leading the world in providing a safe place for refugees.

“We continue to be the single greatest contributo­r to the relief of humanitari­an crisis all around the world, and we will continue to do so,“Pompeo told reporters in Rome on the sidelines of a conference on religious freedom organized by the U.S. Embassy. “Certainly so long as President Trump is in office, I can promise you this administra­tion is deeply committed to that.”

But advocates say the government’s actions do not show that. Since taking office, Trump has slashed the number of refugees allowed into the country by more than 80 percent, reflecting his broader efforts to drasticall­y reduce both legal and illegal immigra

tion.

The U.S. allowed in just over 10,800 refugees — a little more than half of the 18,000 cap set by Trump for 2020 — before the State Department suspended the program because of the coronaviru­s.

The 18,000 cap was already the lowest in the history of the program. In addition, the State Department announced last week that it would no longer provide some statistica­l informatio­n on refugee resettleme­nt, sparking more concerns.

Advocates say the Trump administra­tion is dismantlin­g a program that has long enjoyed bipartisan support and has been considered a model

for protecting the world’s most vulnerable people.

Scores of resettleme­nt offices have closed because of the drop in federal funding, which is tied to the number of refugees placed in the U.S.

And the damage is reverberat­ing beyond American borders as other countries close their doors to refugees as well.

“We’re talking about tens of millions of desperate families with no place to go and having no hope for protection in the near term,” said Krish Vignarajah, president of the Lutheran Immigratio­n and Refugee Service, a federally funded agency charged with resettling refugees in the United States.

 ?? Rick Bowmer / Associated Press file photo ?? Abdisellam Hassen Ahmed, a Somali refugee who had been stuck in limbo after President Donald Trump temporaril­y banned refugee entries, walks with his wife, Nimo Hashi, and his 2-year-old daughter, Taslim, who he met for the first time on Feb. 10, 2017, after arriving at Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport. Refugee advocates, including faith-based groups that President Donald Trump is courting in his reelection bid, called on Congress on Thursday to halt his administra­tion’s plans to slash the limit on refugees allowed into the U.S. to a record low, saying it goes against America’s values.
Rick Bowmer / Associated Press file photo Abdisellam Hassen Ahmed, a Somali refugee who had been stuck in limbo after President Donald Trump temporaril­y banned refugee entries, walks with his wife, Nimo Hashi, and his 2-year-old daughter, Taslim, who he met for the first time on Feb. 10, 2017, after arriving at Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport. Refugee advocates, including faith-based groups that President Donald Trump is courting in his reelection bid, called on Congress on Thursday to halt his administra­tion’s plans to slash the limit on refugees allowed into the U.S. to a record low, saying it goes against America’s values.

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