Los Angeles Times

It’s bad politics to continue Trump’s anti-asylum policy

The pandemic was never a valid reason to turn away migrants

- By Karen Musalo Karen Musalo is a law professor and the founding director of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at UC Hastings College of the Law. She is also lead co-author of “Refugee Law and Policy: A Comparativ­e and Internatio­nal Approach.”

The so-called Title 42 border closure, which uses the COVID-19 pandemic to justify immediate expulsion or deportatio­n of people fleeing persecutio­n and torture, has always been heartless and illegal. So why is the Biden administra­tion indefinite­ly continuing this most egregious and unlawful of Trump’s immigratio­n policies? Recent reports confirm that it’s in part because the White House doesn’t want the political repercussi­ons of ending it.

That craven position would be a flimsy defense in court. It’s also simply bad politics.

Biden continues to be accused of advocating open borders. It is likely that nothing he can do will placate those who supported Trump’s anti-immigrant policies. On the other hand, recent polling shows that a majority of Americans believe “immigratio­n is a good thing” for the country, and American support for resettleme­nt of Afghan refugees was at 81% in August. It is not necessaril­y true that harsh immigratio­n policies are winning strategies.

Even if it were politicall­y expedient to keep the border closed to those seeking safety, turning away these individual­s without any opportunit­y to apply for protection is a violation of U.S. law, as well as of internatio­nal treaties to which the U.S. is a party. The pretext of Title 42 does not make our actions any less a violation of law. This point was made quite clear by Harold Koh, a senior State Department legal advisor and former dean of Yale Law School who has served in four presidenti­al administra­tions. In a stern rebuke, Koh wrote that the use of Title 42 was “illegal” and “inhumane,” inconsiste­nt with American values and not worthy of the Biden administra­tion.

Just as the Trump administra­tion invoked it in March 2020, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced this summer that it would continue, the Biden administra­tion could revoke Title 42 now, permitting asylum applicatio­ns again in compliance with our legal obligation­s.

This misuse of Title 42 authority, a public health law, was the brainchild of former President Trump’s senior advisor Stephen Miller. Evidently not satisfied with the administra­tion’s brutal “Remain in Mexico” policy, which forced asylum seekers to await their hearings in Mexico, once COVID-19 struck Miller decided the pandemic could be used as a pretext to close the border, denying migrants the right to even seek asylum. Officials at the CDC maintained that this measure was not justified by public health considerat­ions and acceded only as a result of sustained White House pressure.

The Title 42 policy has resulted in untold suffering. People refused entry are either expelled to Mexico, where they face kidnapping, rape and other brutal assaults, or they are forcibly returned to their home countries — regardless of the human rights violations they may encounter there. Since September, thousands of Haitians have been deported despite the U.S. government’s acknowledg­ment that Haiti is “grappling with a deteriorat­ing political crisis, violence, and a staggering increase in human rights abuses.” The kidnapping for ransom of American missionari­es in October highlighte­d the acute dangers that persist in the island nation.

Biden’s failure to roll back Title 42 policy has received sharp criticism from the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees, members of Congress, faithbased communitie­s and refugee advocates. Through it all, the Biden administra­tion has defended Title 42 as a necessary public health measure in a time of COVID-19.

This is the same claim the Trump administra­tion made, which has been roundly debunked, including by CDC officials. Leading public health experts have called for an end to the border closure and provided detailed guidance for measures the administra­tion could undertake to ensure community health and safety while admitting asylum seekers.

Biden has repeatedly articulate­d the centrality of human rights to his administra­tion, and the importance of American values, including respecting the rule of law. Actions speak louder than words, and this stated commitment simply cannot be squared with a policy that denies protection to desperate individual­s fleeing grave violence.

It is past time to put an end to the use of Title 42, and to restore asylum as required by domestic and internatio­nal law.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? DOZENS OF migrants were led by U.S. Border Patrol agents to a holding area in June 2019 after they crossed into the U.S. Trump later banned such asylum seekers, using an old public health law.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times DOZENS OF migrants were led by U.S. Border Patrol agents to a holding area in June 2019 after they crossed into the U.S. Trump later banned such asylum seekers, using an old public health law.

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