Houston Chronicle Sunday

Judge orders Biden to reinstate Trump’s Remain in Mexico policy

- By Robert Burnson

A federal judge ordered the Biden administra­tion to revive a controvers­ial policy begun under former President Donald Trump that forces immigrants seeking U.S. asylum at the southern border to wait in Mexico while their applicatio­ns are pending.

U.S. District Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk in Amarillo ruled late Friday that the Biden administra­tion “failed to consider several critical factors,” including the benefits of the Remain in Mexico policy, before ending the program.

It’s another setback for President Joe Biden following a January ruling by a different judge in Texas that temporaril­y blocked the new administra­tion’s plan to pause deportatio­ns of undocument­ed immigrants for 100 days.

Friday’s decision came in a lawsuit filed by the Republican­led states of Texas and Missouri, which claimed the suspension of the program was worsening conditions at the border and allowing criminals to slip into the country.

Biden suspended the Remain in Mexico program the day after he office on Jan. 20, amid criticism that it pushed migrants into squalid and dangerous housing south of the border.

After a review, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas announced the end of the program on June 1. He said he determined that it “does not adequately or sustainabl­y enhance border management in such a way as to justify the program’s extensive operationa­l burdens and other shortfalls.”

In his 53-page ruling, Matthew J. Kacsmaryk said that Mayorkas had failed “to show a reasoned decision” for ending the program. The judge, who was appointed by Trump, also faulted the Biden appointee for not addressing “the problems created by false claims of asylum” or considerin­g that many asylum seekers are “found non-meritoriou­s by federal immigratio­n judges.”

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt called the decision “a big step toward securing the border” in a statement.

“The Biden administra­tion’s lax border policies increase the risk for human traffickin­g at the border and, in turn, in Missouri,” Schmitt said.

The Department of Homeland Security didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email message seeking comment.

The judge put his ruling on hold for seven days to allow the administra­tion to appeal.

 ?? Tribune News Service file photo ?? Migrants from Central America and Mexico wait in a tent encampment in 2019 at the U.S.-Mexico border.
Tribune News Service file photo Migrants from Central America and Mexico wait in a tent encampment in 2019 at the U.S.-Mexico border.

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