Trump's new anti-asylum rule faces court test in California
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[July 24, 2019]
(Reuters) - A new U.S. rule aimed at
slashing the number of asylum cases at the southern border with Mexico
faces a court test on Wednesday when a federal judge will hear arguments
about whether to block the measure pending trial.
Groups led by the American Civil Liberties Union sued President Donald
Trump's administration after it issued a so-called interim final rule on
July 16 that would require asylum-seekers to first pursue safe haven in
a third country through which they had traveled on their way to the
United States.
Opponents say the rule violates U.S. laws covering asylum-seekers
fleeing persecution, while the Trump administration considers it a legal
means to combat fraudulent asylum claims.
Judge Jon Tigar in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of
California will hear arguments on Wednesday about whether to issue a
temporary restraining order that would block the rule, which otherwise
took effect last week.
Only the restraining order is at issue, not the underlying merits of the
case. The judge could rule from the bench whether to issue the
restraining order or take several days.
The case is similar to another one in the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia filed by the Capital Area Immigrants' Rights
Coalition that also challenges the Trump administration rule. That case
had a hearing on Monday and a decision about a temporary restraining is
due any time.
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President Donald Trump addresses Turning Point USA's Teen Student
Action Summit in Washington, U.S., July 23, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
Trump's rule to restrict asylum-seekers was the latest measure ahead
of the November 2020 election to please his political supporters,
who sent him to the White House after a 2016 campaign in which he
promised to build a border wall and also ban immigrants from
predominantly Muslim countries.
The Trump administration has issued a rapid-fire series of
anti-immigration edicts recently, the latest coming on Monday with a
new rule to expedite deportations for immigrants who entered the
United States illegally and are caught anywhere within it. The rule
expands a program typically applied only along the southern border.
Democrats have blasted the policies as cruel, faulting the Trump
administration for warehousing migrants in crowded detention
facilities along the border and separating immigrant children from
the adults they have traveled with.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Tom Brown)
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