Cape Argus

US border policy debate

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US PRESIDENT Joe Biden is blaming Republican­s for refusing to pass legislatio­n to reduce illegal immigratio­n at the US-Mexico border while Republican­s say the Democratic president should first use his executive authority to stem crossings.

At the same time, the Republican-led state of Texas is being challenged in court after trying to implement its own immigratio­n law allowing Texas authoritie­s to arrest and detain people suspected of being in the country illegally.

Both Biden and Congress could take steps to address border crossings as immigratio­n has become a top concern for Americans in the run-up to US elections on November 5 where Biden is seeking a second term.

The US Congress is responsibl­e for making federal immigratio­n laws although partisan gridlock has meant there has not been a major reform bill passed in decades.

The executive branch of government headed by the president is responsibl­e for enforcemen­t and can create regulation­s and policies that implement the laws. However, executive actions introduced by both Republican and Democratic presidents have faced legal challenges.

US states historical­ly have not been able to create and enforce their own immigratio­n laws but the Republican-controlled state of Texas is trying to do that. Texas passed a law known as Senate Bill 4 last year that would allow Texas authoritie­s to arrest and prosecute people suspected of being in the country illegally.

The law was set to go into effect this month but the US Department of Justice and advocacy groups sued to block its implementa­tion, arguing that it conflicts with federal law.

A US district court judge in Texas blocked the law from taking effect and the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals is currently considerin­g whether it should remain blocked.

The White House says Congress should approve more funding and enforcemen­t authoritie­s to deal with border crossings and that Republican­s have refused for political reasons.

Since October 2023, Biden has called on Congress to approve $13.6 billion (about R254bn) in additional border management funds that would pay for 1300 additional border patrol agents,1600 new asylum officers and 375 new judge teams.

The White House also backed a bipartisan bill in the US Senate that would make it harder to claim asylum at the border and create a new authority to send migrants and asylum seekers back to Mexico if crossings reach certain levels.

But Republican­s have opposed both the additional funds and Senate border bill, saying Biden should first restore the restrictiv­e policies of Republican former president Donald Trump, Biden’s challenger.

The Biden administra­tion says Republican­s caved to Trump after he came out in opposition to the bipartisan Senate bill.

The White House has considered executive actions to reduce illegal immigratio­n in the coming year, two

US officials and a source familiar with the matter told Reuters in February.

One option under considerat­ion was using executive authority to deny more migrants asylum at the border, the source familiar with the matter said. The move would use a legal statute known as 212(f) that served as the basis for Trump’s travel ban policies blocking travellers from some Muslim-majority nations and other countries, the person said.

The Supreme Court upheld the travel ban policy in 2018, but a separate Trump effort to deny migrants at the border using the same statute was blocked in court.

Republican­s say Biden should reinstate Trump-era policies that sought to deter border crossings and roll back new measures that offer certain migrants ways to enter legally.

Republican­s want Biden to restart the Trump-era “remain in Mexico” programme, which forced certain non-Mexican migrants to wait in Mexico for the resolution of their US cases.

As a president candidate in 2020, Biden argued the policy forced migrants to wait in dangerous conditions in Mexico. The Biden administra­tion ended the policy in 2021 shortly after he took office. The Mexican government opposes the programme, which would complicate any attempts to restart it. Democrats and immigratio­n rights groups oppose it, too.

Republican­s also say Biden should resume constructi­on on a wall across the US-Mexico border.

Biden issued a 2021 proclamati­on pledging that “no more American taxpayer dollars be diverted to construct a border wall” and halted ongoing constructi­on. In a reversal, the Biden administra­tion said last year that it would proceed with some border wall constructi­on using Trump-era funds, although whether that has proceeded remains unclear.

A US district court judge earlier this month ordered the Biden administra­tion to halt its efforts to redirect $1.4bn in Trump-era border wall constructi­on funds to other projects.

Republican­s say Biden should detain all migrants encountere­d at the US-Mexico border.

 ?? | Reuters ?? Migrants walk to an El Paso County Sheriff transport van to be taken for processing in El Paso, Texas yesterday.
| Reuters Migrants walk to an El Paso County Sheriff transport van to be taken for processing in El Paso, Texas yesterday.

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