Biden to Expand Trump-Era Policy to Expel Migrants at Southern Border
by Kyle Anzalone and Will Porter | Jan
5, 2023
The White House has rolled out an updated immigration policy,
unveiling plans to strengthen rules developed under the Donald Trump
administration to quickly deport migrants who attempt to enter the country
through the border with Mexico.
President Joe Biden outlined the new policy in a speech on
Thursday morning, imploring migrants not to come to the US without
following the proper procedures while stressing the need for a ”safe and
orderly process.”
“My message is this: If you’re trying to leave Cuba,
Nicaragua, or Haiti… do not just show up at the border. Stay where you are and
apply legally from there,” he said, vowing to “stiffen enforcement for those
who try to come without a legal right to stay.”
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) later explained that
border agencies will expand their use of Title 8 deportations as the Biden
administration seeks to phase out separate authorities under Title 42, which
were first invoked by Trump in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. The new rules
will allow the government to expel anyone entering the US who does not claim
asylum for fear of being seriously harmed, with DHS saying it would enhance ”expedited
removal under Title 8 authorities for those who cannot be processed under the
Title 42 public health order.” Migrants expelled under Title 8 will be
forbidden from entering the US for a period of five years.
“Individuals without a legal basis to remain in the
United States will be subject to prompt expulsion or removal,” DHS chief
Alejandro Mayorkas said.
The Biden plan requires migrants who pass through a
third country to apply for asylum in that country and not in the United States.
A similar policy under Trump – known as the “Remain in Mexico” rule – was condemned as illegal and
xenophobic by critics. On the 2020 campaign trail, Biden attacked Trump’s
border policies as harmful to desperate migrants, saying he “slammed the door
shut in the face of families fleeing persecution and violence.” The
then-candidate pledged to “eliminate President Trump’s decision to limit
asylum” on “day one“ of his administration.
During Thursday’s speech, Biden said most
migrants arriving at America’s southern border are coming from Cuba, Nicaragua,
Venezuela and Haiti, suggesting internal problems in those countries were to
blame for the massive uptick in immigration to the US. However, Cuba,
Venezuela and Nicaragua are each subject to heavy US sanctions, exacerbating
their economic troubles and, in some cases, preventing imports of certain key
goods. Haiti, meanwhile, has descended into chaos over
the last 18 months in the wake of the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse,
seeing intermittent clashes between armed gangs and government forces. While
the US pushed for politician Ariel Henry to assume power in Port au Prince, the
‘interim’ leader has failed to control rampant gang violence and has been accused of
being involved in Moïse’s murder.
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