Chicago Sun-Times

Trump’s ghastly policies make asylum-seekers more desperate

- mgarcia@suntimes.com | @MarlenGarc­ia777 Marlen Garcia is a member of the Sun-Times Editorial Board.

President Donald Trump created a crisis at the southern border. Now he will use it to try to get re-elected next year.

It’s classic Trump: Make a bigger mess of our immigratio­n system to prey on some Americans’ nativist fears. Trump is the closest thing to a savior for middle-class and poor whites who resent immigrants. And he’s an expert at sowing division.

His messaging works, too. If people support overhaulin­g immigratio­n and running a legitimate asylum process, then they support open borders. That, at least, is the picture painted by Trump and his many allies in Congress.

By and large, elected Democrats do not support open borders. They never have. Same with Republican­s who supported modernizin­g our immigratio­n system in the past but now are silent under Trump.

“Demagoguer­y can be effective,” a congressio­nal aide remarked to me this week.

Trump repeatedly has made ghastly moves that have resulted in chaos at the border. When he threatened to close the border, he gave a boost to human trafficker­s who could use his words to persuade desperate Central Americans to act quickly to make the trek to America before the anticipate­d closure. Making matters worse, the Department of Homeland Security under Trump has shifted resources from human traffickin­g cases to carrying out Trump’s poorly planned “zero tolerance” policies.

When Trump says he will pull aid from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, it spreads fear in those countries. People living in poverty can only assume their plight will worsen. That’s more incentive to flee their homelands.

In late 2017, Trump canceled the Central American Minors refugee program that allowed some children from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras to apply for resettleme­nt from their home countries. It was put in place by the Obama administra­tion to prevent children from heading on foot to the U.S. to make their claims.

Again, Trump gave people — kids — a reason to make the dangerous trip to the border.

Trump paralyzed immigratio­n courts by shutting down the government last winter. Some pending cases that could not be heard during the shutdown ended up being delayed for years. He succeeded in further crippling a backlogged court system.

His latest attack on the asylum process, making migrants who pass through another country ineligible for asylum in the U.S., could result in even more people crossing the treacherou­s Rio Grande or Arizona desert and dodging asylum altogether. That means they won’t be vetted.

“The reality is that President Trump’s cruel and ineffectiv­e policies on immigratio­n have made our southern border much less secure than when he took office,” Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin said in a speech on the Senate floor earlier this week.

Durbin has led efforts to overhaul the immigratio­n system and has long advocated for protection­s for undocument­ed immigrants brought to the U.S. as children.

In his speech, Durbin emphasized that the U.S. can have a secure border and meet internatio­nal obligation­s to protect refugees fleeing persecutio­n “as we have done on a bipartisan basis for decades.”

Last fall Durbin and other Democrats proposed a bill to address the humanitari­an crisis in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. Its goal is to push for reforms in those countries and try to stem migration to the U.S. To go anywhere, the bill needs active support from both parties.

If Trump and Republican­s were serious about finding a solution, they’d join the effort. But it doesn’t suit them. Trump needs a crisis to ramp up fear and proclaim he has the answers.

Beware of false prophets.

 ?? MARCO UGARTE/AP ?? People line up to cross the border into the U.S. on Tuesday in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico.
MARCO UGARTE/AP People line up to cross the border into the U.S. on Tuesday in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico.
 ?? MARLEN GARCIA ??
MARLEN GARCIA

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