The Bakersfield Californian

Biden, Congress mull big policy changes

- REBECCA SANTANA The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is taking a more active role in Senate negotiatio­ns over changes to the immigratio­n system that Republican­s are demanding in exchange for providing money to Ukraine in its fight against Russia and Israel for the war with Hamas.

The Democratic president has said he is willing to make “significan­t compromise­s on the border” as Republican­s block the wartime aid in Congress. The White House is expected to get more involved in talks this week as the impasse over changes to border policy has deepened and the funds remaining for Ukraine have dwindled.

“It’s time to cut a deal that both sides can agree to,” Biden’s budget director, Shalanda Young, said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Republican­s say the record numbers of migrants crossing the southern border pose a security threat because authoritie­s cannot adequately screen all the migrants and that those who enter the United States are straining the country’s resources. GOP lawmakers also say they cannot justify to their constituen­ts sending billions of dollars to other countries, even in a time of war, while failing to address the border at home.

Republican Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma, who is leading the negotiatio­ns, pointed to the surge of people entering the U.S. from Mexico and said “it is literally spiraling out of control.”

Asylum-seekers walk to a U.S. Border Patrol van on Sept. 26 after crossing the nearby border with Mexico near Jacumba Hot Springs.

“All we’re trying to do is to say what tools are needed to be able to get this back in control, so we don’t have the chaos on our southern border,” Lankford said on CBS.

But many immigratio­n advocates, including some Democrats, say some of the changes being proposed would gut protection­s for people who desperatel­y need help and would not really ease the chaos at the border.

Connecticu­t Sen. Chris Murphy, the top Democratic bargainer, said the White House would take a more active role in the talks. But he also panned Republican policy demands so far as “unreasonab­le.”

“We don’t want to shut off the United States of America to people who are coming here to be rescued from dangerous, miserable circumstan­ces, in which their life is in jeopardy. The best of America is that you can come here to be

rescued from terror and torture,” Murphy said on NBC’s ”Meet the Press.”

Much of the negotiatin­g is taking place in private, but some of the issues under discussion are known: asylum standards, humanitari­an parole and fast-track deportatio­n authority, among others.

A look at what they are and what might happen if there are changes:

HUMANITARI­AN PAROLE

Using humanitari­an parole, the U.S. government can let people into the country by essentiall­y bypassing the regular immigratio­n process. This power is supposed to be used on a case-by-case basis for “urgent humanitari­an reasons” or “significan­t public benefit.” Migrants are usually admitted for a pre-determined period and there’s no path toward U.S. citizenshi­p.

Over the years, administra­tions, both Democratic and Republican, have used

humanitari­an parole to admit people into the U.S. and help groups of people from all over the world. It’s been used to admit people from Hungary in the 1950s, from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos during the latter half of the 1970s, and Iraqi Kurds who had worked with the U.S. in the mid-1990s, according to research by the Cato Institute.

Under Biden, the U.S. has relied heavily on humanitari­an parole. The U.S. airlifted nearly 80,000 Afghans from Kabul, the capital of Afghanista­n, and brought them to the U.S. after the Taliban takeover. The U.S. has admitted tens of thousands of Ukrainians who fled after the Russian invasion.

In January the Democratic administra­tion announced a plan to admit 30,000 people a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela via humanitari­an parole, provided those migrants had a financial sponsor and flew to the U.S. instead of going to the U.S.-Mexico border for entry.

The latest U.S. government figures show that nearly 270,000 people had been admitted into the country through October under that program. Separately, 324,000 people have gotten appointmen­ts through a mobile app called CBP One that is used to grant parole to people at land crossings with Mexico.

Republican­s have described the programs as essentiall­y an end run around Congress by letting in large numbers of people who otherwise would have no path to be admitted. Texas sued the administra­tion to stop the program aimed at Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguan­s and Venezuelan­s.

WHAT MIGHT CHANGE WITH ASYLUM?

Asylum is a type of protection that allows a migrant to stay in the U..S. and have a path to American citizenshi­p. To qualify for asylum, someone has to demonstrat­e fear of persecutio­n back home due to a fairly specific set of criteria: race, religion, nationalit­y, membership in a particular social group or political opinions. Asylum-seekers must be on U.S. soil when they ask for this protection.

They generally go through an initial screening called a credible fear interview. If they are determined to have a chance of getting asylum, they are allowed to stay in the U.S. to pursue their case in immigratio­n court. That process can take years. In the meantime, asylum-seekers can start to work, get married, have children and create a life.

Critics say the problem is that most people do not end up getting asylum when their case finally makes it to immigratio­n court. But they say migrants know that if they claim asylum, they essentiall­y will be allowed to stay in America for years.

“People aren’t necessaril­y coming to apply for asylum as much to access that asylum adjudicati­on process,” said Andrew Arthur, a former immigratio­n court judge and fellow at the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which advocates for less immigratio­n in the U.S.

Some of what lawmakers are discussing would raise the bar that migrants need to meet during that initial credible fear interview. Those who do not meet it would be sent home.

But Paul Schmidt, a retired immigratio­n court judge who blogs about immigratio­n court issues, said the credible fear interview was never intended to be so tough. Migrants are doing the interview soon after arriving at the border from an often arduous and traumatizi­ng journey, he said. Schmidt said the interview is more of an “initial screening” to weed out those with frivolous asylum claims.

Schmidt also questioned the argument that most migrants fail their final asylum screening. He said some immigratio­n judges apply overly restrictiv­e standards and that the system is so backlogged that it is hard to know exactly what the most recent and reliable statistics are.

 ?? DENIS POROY — FREELANCER, FR59680 AP ??
DENIS POROY — FREELANCER, FR59680 AP

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