Miami Herald (Sunday)

Biden finally stops looking the other way on Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan immigratio­n

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com

President Biden, apparently, isn’t out to lunch on immigratio­n anymore. When the fragile ecosystem of Dry Tortugas, a national park off Florida’s coast, becomes a port of entry for hundreds of Cubans sailing rickety homemade boats, the time to act was yesterday.

So, with a quarreling, do-nothing Congress as a backdrop — and an unrelentin­g number of asylum seekers arriving every day — the Biden administra­tion finally has taken serious steps to address unrestrict­ed immigratio­n to South Florida and the Mexico border.

Months of record-breaking arrivals later, even Democrats are conceding, privately and publicly, that free-for-all Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan and Venezuelan immigratio­n is impossible to sustain, both politicall­y and in terms of resources.

Some Dems praise Biden’s mix of new, legal open doors with his crackdown on arrivals aided by illegal activity.

“The new border actions Biden rolled out expand legal pathways while also putting into effect deterrents for illegal immigratio­n and the smuggling and human traffickin­g that have existed,” said Felice Gorordo, a Biden ally, CEO of tech-hub eMerge Americas and co-founder of the U.S.-Cuba relations nonprofit Roots of Hope.

However, prominent Democrats including Sens. Bob Menéndez of New Jersey, Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico, Alex Padilla of California, and Cory Booker of New Jersey think stricter rules will encourage more shady dealings, not stem migration.

In a joint statement, they condemned what they called “a transit ban” at the southern border and the extension of ex-President Trump’s loathed Title 42 pandemic-era summary expulsions to include Cubans and Nicaraguan­s.

Indeed, the rules pose a profound shift politicall­y. No more Biden looking the other way.

‘CARROT & STICK’ POLICY

Immigrant advocates also rejected new policies that will end up turning away asylum seekers despite the creation of legal and safer pathways. Legal entry will include documentat­ion and two-year work permits for the 30,000 vetted and paroled each month.

But, says the immigratio­n advocacy group America’s Voice, Biden’s “carrot and stick approach” is “unbecoming of a proimmigra­tion president.”

Yet, without a Congress willing to overhaul of the broken immigratio­n system and Americans increasing­ly upset over illegal crossings, what other choices did Biden really have?

Republican­s constantly use xenophobia to score political points. They’re united in the desire to see Biden fail at everything but, notably, his actions left them speechless. (Though probably not for long).

A White House fact sheet Touted: “Unlike some Republican officials playing political games and obstructin­g real solutions to fix our broken immigratio­n system, President Biden has a plan and is taking action.”

VOICELESS MOST AFFECTED

Unfortunat­ely, the most tragically affected by the change in policy will be people caught en route, risking their lives at sea or on dangerous multi-country treks to flee collapsing homelands like Haiti and failing regimes like Cuba’s and Nicaragua’s.

Will domestic immigratio­n policy make any difference when the root causes of mass migration remain in place at home? When immigratio­n is instigated by regimes like Cuba’s to get rid of the opposition and repress with more impunity?

Immigratio­n is a profitable venture for the Cuban and Venezuelan dictatorsh­ips, and crucial support to gang-ruled Haiti. Cubans who leave ended up supporting relatives, according to estimates, to the tune of $2 billion to 3 billion in remittance­s during pre-pandemic years.

NO MARIEL COMPARISON

No doubt, the unpreceden­ted number of Cuban migrants in the Florida Keys finally catapulted border issues to the top of Biden’s priority list. Only a few days ago, the president walked away from a reporter asking about a crisis many see as another Mariel.

But forget allusions to the Mariel boatlift of 1980 under President Jimmy Carter.

The comparison sheds little light on the current Cuban immigratio­n crisis testing the Biden administra­tion’s election-time commitment to operate a humane, legal immigratio­n system accessible to asylum seekers — and one that, on the other hand, doesn’t make a mockery of the nation’s borders.

This Cuban exodus has broken all-time records and continues into 2023 despite deaths and disappeara­nces at sea.

Some 125,000 Cubans arrived in South Florida shores in a period five months during Mariel, then it all ended as suddenly as it started. Back then, Haitians,

too, were fleeing the Duvalier regime, but not in huge, visible numbers.

This exodus has been open-ended for years. During the last year alone, 2% of Cuba’s 11 million population has fled, most of them to the United States.

Cubans with resources fly to a third country, cross into Mexico and ask for asylum at the border. Cubans with nothing but homemade, barely floating vessels had, perhaps until now, no other option than to risk it all in the treacherou­s Florida Straits.

There’s less of an incentive to come here illegally with the opening of legal avenues.

But poor people from remote towns and provinces may not have the access, nor the ability to articulate need — and surely they will be first in line for expulsion under Biden’s repatriati­on rules.

It’ll be hard to change what has been working for them. What do they have to lose trying besides their lives? Now, a five-year ban from trying again.

Most of the people arriving are young, driven by guts, hope and dreams of a better future. This is the exodus of “los primos,” the cousins, someone with his ear to the ground tells me.

When constant blackouts spoil what little food they hustle for their family, when the thought police constantly accosts, it’s impossible not to see migration as the only option.

It’s a never-ending story, an unbearable reality no Republican or Democratic rainmaker in Washington can change.

Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

 ?? U.S. Coast Guard ?? The U.S. Coast Guard released photos of Cuban migrants on the Dry Tortugas island.
U.S. Coast Guard The U.S. Coast Guard released photos of Cuban migrants on the Dry Tortugas island.

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