Los Angeles Times

Trump further restricts asylum

President imposes fees and takes away work permits, as he faces financial, legal limits.

- By Molly O’Toole

WASHINGTON — President Trump has issued new rules to further restrict the asylum claims overwhelmi­ng the nation’s immigratio­n system, even as the White House prepares a request to seek more money from Congress for stiffer enforcemen­t and faster processing of migrants.

The Homeland Security Department, which enforces immigratio­n law and has an overall budget of about $50 billion, will run out of money before the fiscal year ends in September because of increased demands from a surge of migrants on the southern border, according to the acting secretary, Kevin McAleenan.

Despite Trump’s efforts to crack down, asylum claims and overall immigratio­n have increased steadily in recent months, chiefly from families fleeing persecutio­n, violence and poverty in Central America. More than 90,000 migrants were apprehende­d last month alone, the highest monthly tally in more than a decade.

“Simply put, the system is full and we are well beyond our capacity,” McAleenan told a House appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee Tuesday.

Immigratio­n advocates and other critics said Trump’s new rules, which include making asylum seekers pay applicatio­n fees, will exacerbate strains at the border and potentiall­y backfire against White House efforts to reduce immigratio­n.

In a presidenti­al memo released Monday night, Trump instructed McAleenan and Atty. Gen. William Barr to take steps to implement the measures within 90 days. The restrictio­ns are likely to face court challenges.

The memo also called for barring work permits to migrants who cross the border between official entry points, and for resolving all asylum cases within 180 days.

The memo does not say how Barr and McAleenan, who recently replaced Kirstjen Nielsen, are supposed to clear asylum cases in six months. Cases now take an average of two years.

The Trump administra­tion has increased, rather than reduced, the court backlog of more than 800,000 cases, including by instructin­g judges to reopen closed cases.

Although migrants have a legal right to claim asylum, Trump has declared that many of those filing for asylum are faking their claims.

“The biggest loophole drawing illegal aliens to our borders is the use of fraudulent or meritless asylum claims to gain entry into our great country,” Trump said in a statement accompanyi­ng the memo.

Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Downey), who is chairwoman of the Homeland Security Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee, said Trump’s latest rules would “make matters worse” for migrants.

“Unfortunat­ely, efforts to ensure the safety and civil rights of migrants so far appear to be only an afterthoug­ht,” Roybal-Allard said. “The president’s memo is another tragic step in the wrong direction.”

Illegal immigratio­n is below levels seen from the 1980s to mid-2000s, but Trump and his aides have been frustrated by the recent inf lux at the border.

Although the vast majority of asylum seekers pass an initial interview to determine whether they have “credible fear” of persecutio­n, only about 1 in 5 is ultimately granted permission to stay in the United States — a disparity the administra­tion argues is proof that fraud is rampant.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t recently announced it would send highly trained teams of investigat­ors to the border to root out what it called “fake families.”

But advocates say it is difficult to win asylum cases. Few migrants have lawyers to help them gather the extensive documentat­ion required and navigate America’s complex immigratio­n system. In any case, fraudulent family claims are extremely rare, according to Homeland Security data.

In the last 12 months, agents identified about 3,100 individual­s in family units making fraudulent claims. Those include migrants who claimed to be minors but were older than 18, said Brian Hastings, the Border Patrol’s chief of law enforcemen­t operations.

The total is roughly 1% of all family units apprehende­d at the border in that period.

In seeking more money and new rules, the administra­tion tacitly acknowledg­ed that legal and financial limits have hindered its efforts to get tougher on immigratio­n, as Trump has demanded. Congress has largely refused to provide substantia­l new funding for immigratio­n enforcemen­t, or to change long-standing asylum law.

The White House has urged Congress, so far without success, to amend rules prohibitin­g children from being detained for longer than 20 days. The administra­tion argues that it has been forced to release migrants who then do not show up for court hearings.

McAleenan pushed back against critics who say the administra­tion wants to detain children and families indefinite­ly.

“The notion we want to detain them indefinite­ly or longer than 180 days could not be further from the truth,” McAleenan said. “The idea that we want to detain children for a long time is not accurate, nor would that be an effective way to enforce immigratio­n laws.”

Few countries that are signatorie­s to internatio­nal treaties on refugees charge fees to apply for asylum. Many migrants, including those coming to the U.S.Mexico border, arrive with little but the clothes they wear.

Foreigners in the United States without authorizat­ion are already barred from nearly all public benefits. But Stephen Miller, Trump’s top advisor on immigratio­n, has sought to discourage other immigrants from accessing a wide range of public benefits, including for their children who are U.S. citizens.

Most asylum seekers are not eligible to work until six months after they’ve formally filed their claims. They generally cannot access support programs until courts have granted them legal protection.

Vicki Gass, a senior policy advisor for Central America and Mexico at Oxfam America, a nonprofit charity, said taking away work permits could promote violations of labor laws and put already vulnerable population­s in greater danger of exploitati­on.

“Without work permits, asylum seekers will be forced to work in the undergroun­d economy, putting them at risk of labor and human rights violations,” Gass said in a statement.

Pili Tobar, deputy director of America’s Voice, a pro-immigrants rights group, cited poet Emma Lazarus’ famous welcoming words in the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty.

“Lazarus didn’t add ‘pay to play’ in an asterisk or include ‘this offer only valid ...’ terms in the fine print,” Tobar said in a statement.

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