Miami Herald (Sunday)

The nation needs Biden’s immigratio­n-reform plan, but the stench of Trumpism lingers

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

There’s nothing like the images of packed rickety rafts at sea and unaccompan­ied minors flocking to the border to torpedo President Joe Biden’s push to pass immigratio­n reform.

The nation — and millions of immigrants who already call the United States home — desperatel­y need a system overhaul and a pathway to citizenshi­p. But despite the comprehens­ive bill recently introduced in Congress, there seems to be no winning formula yet on the table.

Biden’s immigratio­n bill — sponsored by CubanAmeri­can Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., and MexicanAme­rican Rep. Linda T. Sánchez, D-Calif. — is short of the 10 Republican votes it needs in the Senate to pass.

The stench of Trumpism, its untruths and anti-immigrant rhetoric, still hangs in the air.

Go “big and bold,” Menendez urged, and for a moment last week, it seemed possible under Biden and a Democratic­majority Congress to pass most of the 353-page bill, even if it takes hard negotiatio­n and, as a last resort, extreme parliament­ary maneuvers.

But there are discouragi­ng signs that trouble lies ahead.

RAFTERS AND CHILDREN

Like his predecesso­rs did, Biden will likely deal with an immigratio­n crisis or two made all the more complicate­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In fact, there’s evidence of hot spots surging, as desperate people flee economic conditions made harsher by the pandemic — and word reaches Cuba and Central America that a kinder administra­tion is reversing Trump’s hardliner policies.

In recent months, the

Coast Guard reports, there has been an uptick in the number of Cuban rafters interdicte­d at sea off South Florida’s shores, more than 100 in barely two months of 2021. Most have been repatriate­d to Cuba without the opportunit­y to make a case for asylum in court; some have made it to land.

At the Southern border, asylum-seeking families and unaccompan­ied minors are arriving to confusion between Trump-era restrictio­ns and Biden’s promise of more humane treatment, The New York Times reports.

Both scenarios are giving people who want to see the immigratio­n bill succeed the jitters.

And, in a worrisome developmen­t, sources told the Miami Herald that the Biden administra­tion has ordered the Homestead detention center for unaccompan­ied minor teens to reopen, igniting justified anger from Democrats and hypocritic­al concern from Republican­s who supported family separation and incarcerat­ion of children under Trump.

The reopening of a “prison-like” camp in our back yard, a place where some minors alleged they were sexually abused, would be a damning retreat from campaign promises made by Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.

Trump-styled cruelty would not happen under their watch, they vowed.

Yet, Biden’s administra­tion has already opened a similar holding facility in Texas that can house 700 unaccompan­ied minors ages 13 to 17, and that, too, is being rightly criticized. Children should be placed in the custody of sponsors, relatives, and child-care experts, not left vulnerable to the secrecy under which detention camps operate.

The immigratio­n bill, on the other hand, assigns resources to an orderly, legal immigratio­n process, adequately funding and staffing courtrooms and judges to process asylum claims.

A replay of border chaos is hardly the ideal scenario to push the comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform bill in Congress. Biden will have to demonstrat­e that he can avert a full-blown crisis, keep borders secure and at the same time he must stay true to his pledge for humane treatment.

Immigratio­n goes handin-hand with U.S. policy toward the Americas.

By addressing in a highprofil­e way the issues at home — and giving people hope of a better future — Biden can diminish illegal immigratio­n and human traffickin­g. Setting legal and reasonable pathways for family reunificat­ion, almost nonexisten­t during the Trump years, also would go a long way to ending dangerous flights by sea and multi-country treks.

It would be a shame if another refugee crisis sidelines needed reform.

Major polls show that providing an eight-year-long path to legalizati­on for the 11 million undocument­ed in country — so many of them critical workers who have kept this country running through the pandemic — is favored by a majority of

American voters.

Reform or no reform, the DREAMers, brought here as children and Americans in every way except on paper, should be legalized now.

Despite the uphill challenge, Biden and the Democrats are right to aim high.

After all, the last sweeping immigratio­n reform in this country came by way of a Republican dubbed the “champion of conservati­ve values,” Ronald Reagan, in 1986. The A-word, amnesty, was as controvers­ial then as it is now and has been stripped from the immigratio­n vocabulary.

Reagan granted amnesty to nearly 3 million undocument­ed immigrants, and the Republican Party benefited from the initiative in places like Miami, where many of the Central Americans fleeing wars became Republican­s.

Before Reagan, Democratic administra­tions gave Cuban Americans the privilege of wholesale entry and easily adjusted immigratio­n status — and they became the largest Hispanic group in the country to register and vote Republican.

The GOP had nothing to fear with Reagan’s amnesty — and has nothing to fear now under Biden’s reform.

 ?? HAROLD VILCHES Courtesy ?? NTR Metals gold dealer Renato Rodriguez stands with one of his company’s suppliers.
HAROLD VILCHES Courtesy NTR Metals gold dealer Renato Rodriguez stands with one of his company’s suppliers.
 ?? GAULA POLICÍA Courtesy ?? Samer Barrage, NTR Metals’ vice president for Latin America, was arrested in March 2017.
GAULA POLICÍA Courtesy Samer Barrage, NTR Metals’ vice president for Latin America, was arrested in March 2017.
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