China Daily

Immigratio­n reform a tough task for Biden

- The author is a research fellow at the Charhar Institute and a member of the Chinese Institute of Command and Control. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

US President Joe Biden’s efforts to reverse his predecesso­r Donald Trump’s hard-line, regressive policies, including his attempt to reform the US immigratio­n system, encountere­d bumps in the very first week of his presidency.

On Jan 26, a federal judge in Texas temporaril­y blocked Biden’s 100-day deportatio­n moratorium. However, days later Biden unveiled hefty immigratio­n reforms — formally named the US Citizenshi­p Act of 2021 — which would include providing an eight-year path to citizenshi­p for more than 11 million undocument­ed immigrants if it becomes law.

The act will also preserve and strengthen the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program introduced by former president Barack Obama in 2012 to allow individual­s with unlawful presence in the US after being brought to the country as children to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportatio­n and become eligible for a work permit.

On Feb 18, Biden and congressio­nal Democrats submitted the citizenshi­p act to Congress for passing into law. The White House quoted Biden as saying: “The legislatio­n I sent to Congress will bring about much needed change to an immigratio­n system where reform is long overdue. It will responsibl­y manage the border with smart investment­s. It will address the root causes of irregular migration from Central America. It will modernize our legal immigratio­n pathways and create an earned path to citizenshi­p for so many — including Dreamers, farmworker­s and TPS (temporary protected status) holders.”

Biden has said that he may accept a more-piecemeal approach if separate major elements could be approved.

Separately, enforcemen­t guidelines released on Feb 18 by the Biden administra­tion will target immigratio­n enforcemen­t more directly at people living illegally in the country who pose a threat. That, too, will be a reversal from the broader targeting policy of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t under Trump.

In the first week of February, Biden signed three more executive orders on immigratio­n. The first created a task force led by secretary of homeland security that will work to reunite families that were separated at the border under the Trump administra­tion. The second was to investigat­e the root humanitari­an issues at the US’ southern border. And the third ordered a full review of the previous administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies.

Biden, however, may face internal and external pressures in reversing the Trump-era restrictiv­e immigratio­n policies. For example, after devastatin­g hurricanes wreaked havoc in parts of Central America in November, many people were left homeless and jobless. And Biden’s promise to lift immigratio­n bans could encourage them to head toward the US in search of a better life.

The Trump administra­tion took the toughest possible measures to restrict immigratio­n, including building the wall along the border with Mexico, adopting a “zero tolerance” policy on immigratio­n, deporting people and separating families, and banning people from seven Muslim countries from entering the US.

When thousands of people from Central American countries marched toward the US in October 2018, Trump sent soldiers to the US-Mexico border threatenin­g to use force to stop them from crossing into the US.

And when the COVID-19 pandemic was at its peak in the US in 2020, Trump further tightened immigratio­n rules in the name of disease prevention and control. Indeed, Trump used anti-immigratio­n rules to please his supporters.

Biden holds the opposite view. He regards immigratio­n as a key feature of American culture and considers immigrants as an important part of the labor force that contribute­s to the US economy.

Biden has also taken some other measures to reverse Trump’s immigratio­n rules, including halting the constructi­on of the border wall. Yet it will not be easy for him to push forward his ambitious immigratio­n policies. Trump modified and implemente­d more than 400 immigratio­n rules, some overlappin­g each other, which makes Biden’s policy reform a very challengin­g task.

A sweeping change of Trump’s policies will have a huge impact on the US immigratio­n system and could encourage waves of immigrants to head to the US. While immigratio­n advocacy groups are pressuring Biden to allow entry to tens of thousands of immigrants blocked by Trump’s policies, lax immigratio­n policies could create new problems for US society. Accepting refugees will put added pressure on the US economy, and unrestrict­ed flows of refugees can create opportunit­ies for terrorists to slip into the country.

One of Trump’s election planks in 2016 was banning the entry of illegal immigrants and he won. Worse, the pandemic has prompted more Americans to shun (rather hate) immigrants, and the idea of closing borders to cut the transmissi­on chains of the novel coronaviru­s has gained more supporters in the US.

The Biden administra­tion realizes the difficulti­es of reforming the immigratio­n system, and knows that it is a long-term process that requires huge funds.

Potential immigrants, on their part, should know that streamlini­ng immigratio­n rules is a difficult task and therefore should not be overoptimi­stic about Biden fulfilling all his immigratio­n promises in the short term.

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