The Guardian (USA)

Biden officials propose denying some migrants earlier in asylum process

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

The Biden administra­tion on Thursday proposed a new rule that it said would streamline asylum processing at the southern border by quickly denying certain migrants deemed to “pose a national security or public safety risk”.

The proposed rule would allow immigratio­n officials to reject and deport migrants who are already ineligible for asylum at an earlier stage in the process, a change administra­tion officials said would enhance national security and save taxpayer dollars.

The rule targets migrants who have been “convicted of a particular­ly serious crime”, who have “participat­ed in the persecutio­n of others”, who are “inadmissib­le on national security or terrorism-related grounds” or for whom there are reasonable grounds to deem them a danger to the security of the United States, according to a memo distribute­d by the Department of Homeland Security.

Federal law already bars individual­s who pose a national security or public safety threat from being granted asylum, but the new rule would allow asylum officers to consider their ineligibil­ity during an initial screening for “credible fear” – a criterion for establishi­ng asylum – which can take place just days after the individual is encountere­d at the border.

“The proposed rule we have published today is yet another step in our ongoing efforts to ensure the safety of the American public by more quickly identifyin­g and removing those individual­s who present a security risk and have no legal basis to remain here,” Alejandro Mayorkas, the secretary of homeland security, said in a statement. “We will continue to take action, but fundamenta­lly it is only Congress that can fix what everyone agrees is a broken immigratio­n system.”

A senior homeland security official, who spoke to reporters on Thursday on the condition of anonymity, said the number of migrants subject to asylum bars was “small”, but did not provide an estimate. The official added that the rule would “save taxpayer money” because many of the migrants subject to asylum bars are detained throughout the proceeding­s, which can take months.

The move comes as Biden confronts bipartisan calls to take executive actions to stem the flow of people crossing the US-Mexico border. After reaching record highs last year, border crossings have steadily declined since December. But the issue continues to be one of the president’s biggest political vulnerabil­ities before the November election, and polls show widespread, albeit polarized, frustratio­n with the president’s handling of the border.

Republican­s, led by the party’s presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump, blame Biden for the unpreceden­ted situation at the US-Mexico border. Progressiv­e Democrats, Latino leaders and immigratio­n rights advocates are pressing him to do more to protect immigrants already living and working in the United States. At the same time, swing-state and borderstat­e Democrats are pushing Biden to use his executive authority to clamp down on border crossings.

“As the Biden administra­tion considers executive actions on immigratio­n, we must not return to failed Trump-era policies aimed at banning asylum and moving us backwards,” senator Alex Padilla, a Democrat of California said at a press conference on Wednesday. “I urge President Biden to embrace our values as a nation of immigrants and use this opportunit­y to instead provide relief for the long-term immigrants of this nation.”

Earlier this year, Congressio­nal Republican­s tanked a bipartisan border deal at the behest of Trump in order to deny Biden a political win. Congressio­nal Republican­s have since argued that Biden already has the executive authority to halt the flow of migrants.

Biden has continued to call on Congress to act.

Meanwhile, Trump has vowed to carry out the “largest domestic deportatio­n operation in American history” should he win re-election in November,

laying out a suite of legally questionab­le policies that include the deployment of military and police units and the creation of vast detention camps along the southern border.

The changes announced on Thursday are limited in scope. But Biden has said his administra­tion is exploring a broader set of executive actions,including whether he has the authority to shut down the southern border.

 ?? ?? Migrants with interviews are allowed to enter the United States at the Chaparral pedestrian border on May 16, 2023, in Tijuana, Mexico. The Biden administra­tion on Thursday proposed a new rule that it said would streamline the asylum process by restrictin­g access earlier for certain migrants deemed to “pose a national security or public safety risk”. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Migrants with interviews are allowed to enter the United States at the Chaparral pedestrian border on May 16, 2023, in Tijuana, Mexico. The Biden administra­tion on Thursday proposed a new rule that it said would streamline the asylum process by restrictin­g access earlier for certain migrants deemed to “pose a national security or public safety risk”. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

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