Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump action takes aim at uninsured immigrants

- MARIA SACCHETTI

WASHINGTON — The White House late Friday issued a proclamati­on saying it would deny visas to immigrants who “will financiall­y burden” the U.S. health care system starting Nov. 3, demanding that foreign nationals prove that they have insurance or are affluent enough to cover their own health care costs before entering the United States.

The new rule comes as President Donald Trump is facing an impeachmen­t inquiry and intensifyi­ng his efforts to fulfill his campaign promises to curb immigratio­n. Like many of Trump’s immigratio­n policies, it is likely to face swift legal challenges in federal courts.

Trump said he is taking the action to “protect the availabili­ty of health care benefits for Americans,” and said “taxpayers bear substantia­l cost” in paying for medical expenses of people who lack health insurance.

“Immigrants who enter this country should not further saddle our health care system, and subsequent­ly American taxpayers, with higher costs,” Trump said in the proclamati­on.

Analysts said the proclamati­on appears to target family-based migration, the type of so-called chain migration that the Trump administra­tion has been unable to persuade Congress to reduce. The White House has pushed for policies that would favor wealthier migrants with special skills over migrants from poorer countries, including in Latin America.

Trump’s proclamati­on comes as the administra­tion is also preparing to implement a new “public charge” rule Oct. 15 that seeks to deny green cards and U.S. citizenshi­p to poor immigrants.

To obtain an immigratio­n visa, foreigners must prove they will be covered by “approved health insurance,” such as a family or employment-based policy, within 30 days of entering the United States, unless they are affluent enough to cover their “reasonably foreseeabl­e medical costs.”

Among the legal provisions Trump invoked to support his proclamati­on is Section 212(f) of the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act, which grants the president authority to declare certain migrants ineligible for asylum because it “would be contrary to the national interest.” The section is the same legal authority he invoked during the 2017 travel ban, which mainly limited travel of nationals of certain Muslim-majority countries.

Doug Rand, a former White House official in President Barack Obama’s administra­tion who worked on immigratio­n policy, said Trump’s proclamati­on is likely to affect the immediate relatives of U.S. citizens waiting overseas for permission to come to the United States, including parents, spouses and siblings. Children are exempt.

He said the new rules would not affect the relatives of immigrants already in the United States.

The proclamati­on also does not appear to affect migrants arriving on work visas, refugees or those seeking asylum at the Mexican border, he said, but he called the new rule “a gigantic, sweeping change to the legal immigratio­n system.”

“As a matter of policymaki­ng this is an incredibly flimsy document,” he said. “We have no idea what the process was and it just kind of happened at 7 o’clock on a Friday. Where did this come from? What was the process? Who was involved in this?”

In the proclamati­on, Trump said “lawful immigrants are about three times more likely than United States citizens to lack health insurance,” without providing a source for the informatio­n, and the White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Scholars have long debated the costs and benefits of immigratio­n to the United States, with some focusing on the costs of health care and education while others noting that migrants and their children contribute millions in income, property and sales taxes.

Trump required the secretary of state, in consultati­on with the secretary of health and human services, the secretary of homeland security, and the heads of other appropriat­e agencies to submit a report on the proclamati­on six months after it takes effect.

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