The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Trump’s immigratio­n policies speak louder than his words

- Catherine Rampell Columnist

Vile, chilling, dangerous and life-threatenin­g.

These words cannot adequately describe the Trump rally chants of “send her back,” referring to a U.S.-citizen congresswo­man, Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., who immigrated from Somalia as a child refugee; or the presidenti­al tweets that inspired this chant, suggesting that Omar as well as three native-born U.S.-citizen congresswo­men of color should all be deported.

Such racist, xenophobic rhetoric has inspired a lot of (deserved) outrage. But did Americans really need to hear these words to know that Trump considers immigrants and brown people to be subhuman? The actual policies his administra­tion has been undertakin­g should have left no doubt.

Last weekend, roughly around the time of those notorious tweets, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t was expected to begin rounding up undocument­ed immigrants — including some who were never properly notified about their immigratio­n court hearings — in raids in at least nine major cities. Frightened families went into hiding — in their homes, secret rooms, churches. The raids were not as widespread as expected, but lingering terror continues to sap economic activity around the country.

Then on Monday, as the news media and public were consumed by those same tweets, the Trump administra­tion announced a sweeping attack on asylum seekers.

The new rule, which went into effect the following day, bars protection for immigrants who failed to apply for asylum in at least one country they passed through before crossing into the United States. It is intended to close the door to large numbers of Central Americans fleeing persecutio­n, effectivel­y sending them back to perilous conditions in their home countries or in Mexico.

On Wednesday, U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services — the agency tasked with processing applicatio­ns for legal immigratio­n — asked its staffers to drop their congressio­nally assigned duties and agree to work in ICE field offices around the country instead, according to an email leaked to BuzzFeed.

There, USCIS employees would, among other things, facilitate a program forcing asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their U.S. cases are adjudicate­d — yet another policy being challenged in court for violating U.S. immigratio­n law.

Last week, the Department of Homeland Security sent its draft final regulation of the “public charge” rule to the White House for final review. This rule would make it more difficult for immigrants who’ve used noncash safety-net services to which they are legally entitled — or who are deemed at risk of ever using such services — to receive green cards or temporary visas.

The proposed rule already seems to be having a chilling effect on usage of benefits such as food stamps and health insurance by both immigrants and their U.S.-citizen children, even though it hasn’t yet gone into effect.

This is just a partial summary of anti-immigrant actions taken this month. It doesn’t include the forced family separation policy that began more than a year ago and resulted in at least 18 infants and toddlers as young as 4 months old being ripped from their parents; or the filthy conditions in which immigrant children have been confined, without toothbrush­es or soap, some for weeks at a time; or the administra­tion’s choice — and it is a choice — to detain people in inhumane conditions while they wait for their cases to be adjudicate­d, rather than releasing them; or, of course, Trump’s attempts to bar all Muslim immigrants from U.S. soil.

By all means, we must continue to condemn Trump’s virulently bigoted rhetoric. But we never needed him to talk the talk to know what he thinks. He’s long been walking the walk.

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