USA TODAY US Edition

U.S. set to surpass Trump’s 50,000 cap on refugees

Travel ban ruling gives lifeline to some

- Alan Gomez @alangomez USA TODAY

The United States is set to reach a contentiou­s milestone this week when it accepts its 50,000th refugee for the fiscal year, hitting a ceiling set by President Trump in his quest to sharply curtail immigratio­n.

The 50,000 figure is 41% lower than the 85,000 refugees accepted during President Obama’s final year in office, and would be the lowest total in a decade.

The White House said the reduction is necessary to give intelligen­ce agencies time to review vetting procedures used to screen refugees to ensure terrorists don’t infiltrate the U.S. posing as refugees. It is the same argument used to justify Trump’s temporary travel ban targeting six majority-Muslim nations.

Refugee groups counter that it is “morally wrong” for America to turn its back on those escaping war and other horrors when the world is facing its greatest migrant crisis. Hans Van de Weerd, chairman of the Refugee Council USA, said it’s more important than ever for the U.S. to perform its historic role as a beacon for those fleeing persecutio­n.

“This administra­tion has chosen yet again to target some of the most vulnerable population­s in the world,” he said.

The door for refugees will remain partly open, however, because of the June 26 ruling by the Supreme Court that allowed a portion of Trump’s travel ban to take effect.

Federal judges blocked two versions of Trump’s travel ban that placed a 90-day moratorium on travel from six majority-Muslim countries and a 120-day ban on the entire refugee program. The judges also prevented the administra­tion from lowering the refugee cap to 50,000 from the 110,000 for the year ending Sept. 30 that Obama set before leaving office.

The Supreme Court allowed all of those restrictio­ns to go into effect but ordered the administra­tion to continue accepting visa applicants and refugees who have a “bona fide” relationsh­ip to a U.S. person or entity.

 ?? CHRIS MCGRATH, GETTY IMAGES ?? Refugee groups say the U.S. has turned its back on the world’s migrant crisis.
CHRIS MCGRATH, GETTY IMAGES Refugee groups say the U.S. has turned its back on the world’s migrant crisis.

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