Lake County Record-Bee

It's time to stop playing politics with immigrants' lives

- By Juan Carlos Gomez Juan Carlos Gomez is a senior policy analyst on immigratio­n at the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP.org). This op-ed was adapted from a longer version at CLASP.org and distribute­d for syndicatio­n by OtherWords.org.

When President Biden was campaignin­g in 2020, he pledged to strengthen our country by supporting and welcoming immigrants. Early in his presidency, he began taking steps in that direction.

On his first day in office, Biden proclaimed an end to his predecesso­r's “Muslim ban,” which summarily banned migration from several Muslimmajo­rity countries. And In February 2021, Biden introduced an executive order aimed at reversing some of the Trump administra­tion's damage to our immigratio­n system, from family separation­s to backlogs in our asylum system.

“Securing our borders does not require us to ignore the humanity of those who seek to cross them,” Biden said at the time. “Nor is the United States safer when resources that should be invested in policies targeting actual threats, such as drug cartels and human trafficker­s, are squandered on efforts to stymie legitimate asylum seekers.”

Biden seemed to understand that being “tough” does not mean you have to support cruel and ineffectiv­e policies. Unfortunat­ely, as immigratio­n has become a more polarizing topic, the administra­tion has backed away from this more humane approach.

Instead, in many ways Biden has actually continued down Trump's path on immigratio­n.

For example, the Trump administra­tion enforced a rule called Title 42 during the height of the COVID pandemic, which severely limited entry into the United States — supposedly to protect public health. Biden continued to implement that policy for years, even without the flimsy public health justificat­ion.

The bipartisan Senate border bill Biden recently endorsed includes funding for a border wall he once promised not to fund — along with new restrictio­ns on asylum and a measure that would authorize the president to shut the border down completely. Biden is also considerin­g using the same authority the Trump administra­tion invoked in its Muslim ban to restrict asylum access.

A few weeks ago, Biden and Trump separately visited the U.S.-Mexico border. Instead of proposing actual solutions to support our immigratio­n system, Biden uplifted the failed Senate bill — and even went so far as to invite Trump to “join him” in working to it.

During his State of the Union address in March, Biden had the opportunit­y to distinguis­h himself from Trump. Instead, his speech demonstrat­ed a strong disconnect between his rhetoric and actions.

Biden said he would not demonize immigrants, but in the same speech used the offensive term “illegal immigrant.” No human being is “illegal.” Continuing to echo that language is dehumanizi­ng and puts immigrant communitie­s at risk of violence. (Biden later said he regretted using the term, but did not apologize for using it.)

Biden said he would not separate families, but his current and proposed immigratio­n policies have separated and continue to separate families. He said he would not ban people from the country because of their faith, but his proposed action would make asylum harder for nearly everyone regardless of their faith.

Invoking his Irish heritage, Biden has alluded to the Great Famine in Ireland to sympathize with immigrants looking for a better life in the United States. But families seeking shelter today from similar hardship would have extreme difficulty getting into the country under the policies he wants to implement.

Biden once understood that punitive measures were not going to make either immigrants or U.S. citizens safer, or make our immigratio­n system more orderly. He understood that we'd need to create pathways to legislatio­n and citizenshi­p, honor our responsibi­lity to offer refuge to asylum seekers, and live up to our American values.

If Biden's sincere about finding real solutions, he needs to remember those commitment­s. It's time to stop playing politics with immigrants' lives.

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