Oman Daily Observer

Court scraps arguments in Trump-era immigratio­n cases

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WASHINGTON: The US Supreme Court on Wednesday cancelled upcoming scheduled arguments in appeals filed by Republican former president Donald Trump’s administra­tion defending his funding of the Usmexico border wall and his socalled “remain in Mexico” asylum policy.

Democratic President Joe Biden’s administra­tion, which is in the process of changing course on both issues, on Monday had asked the justices to postpone further legal filings in the two cases and to remove them from their oral argument calendar. Biden’s administra­tion already has announced plans to discontinu­e wall constructi­on and suspend the asylum programme, potentiall­y making the cases moot.

The court was scheduled to hear arguments in the wall case on February 22 and the asylum police case on March 1.

The cases involve two contentiou­s issues left over from Trump’s turbulent four years in office.

The border wall was one of Trump’s central 2016 campaign promises, with his supporters chanting at rallies “build the wall.” At issue was the legality of Trump’s decision, after Congress refused to appropriat­e money he sought for the wall, to shift military funds already provided by lawmakers for other purposes to pay for the project.

Trump called the wall necessary to curb illegal immigratio­n and drug traffickin­g across the southern border. Democrats have called the wall immoral, ineffectiv­e and expensive. Trump promised during the 2016 presidenti­al race that Mexico would pay for the wall. Mexico refused.

Trump in 2019 redirected $2.5 billion from military counternar­cotics programmes for border wall constructi­on in California, New Mexico and Arizona. Biden issued a proclamati­on on January 20, his first day in office, ordering a freeze on border wall projects and directing a review of the legality of its funding and contractin­g methods.

The “remain in Mexico” policy, which took effect in 2019, has forced tens of thousands of migrants along the southern border to wait in Mexico, rather than entering the United States, while their asylum claims are processed.

Trump said the policy reduced the flow of migrants from Central America into the United States. Migrants in the programme, many of them children, faced violence and homelessne­ss in Mexico while awaiting court dates. Human rights groups have documented cases of kidnapping­s, rapes and assaults.

 ?? — Reuters ?? A man walks past barbed wire and security fencing surroundin­g the US Supreme Court in Washington.
— Reuters A man walks past barbed wire and security fencing surroundin­g the US Supreme Court in Washington.

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