Trump immigration ban to last 60 days, target those seeking permanent
residency
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[April 22, 2020]
By Jeff Mason, Steve Holland and Ted Hesson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump said on Tuesday his new U.S. immigration ban would last 60 days
and apply to those seeking 'green cards' for permanent residency in an
effort to protect Americans seeking to regain jobs lost because of the
coronavirus.
Trump plans to institute the ban through an executive order, which he
said he was likely to sign on Wednesday. He said it would not apply to
individuals entering the United States on a temporary basis and would be
re-evaluated once the 60-day period had passed.
Trump said that pausing immigration would put "unemployed Americans
first in line for jobs" as the country re-opened.
"It would be wrong and unjust for Americans laid off by the virus to be
replaced with new immigrant labor flown in from abroad. We must first
take care of the American worker," he told reporters at the White House.
Trump said there would be some exemptions in the order and he could
renew it for another 60 days or longer.
The president, a Republican, won the White House in 2016 in part on a
promise to crack down on immigration. Critics saw his announcement as a
move to take advantage of a crisis to implement a long-sought policy
goal.
The order could spark legal action.
A senior administration official said the administration was looking at
a separate action to cover others affected by U.S. immigration policy,
including those on so-called H-1B visas.
Trump confirmed that a secondary order was under consideration.
The first order would include exemptions for people involved in
responding to the coronavirus outbreak, including farm workers and those
helping to secure U.S. food supplies, the official said.
As the country begins to open up its economy, immigration flows were
expected to increase, and the administration wanted to ensure that
employers hire back fired workers rather than giving jobs to immigrants
at lower wages.
The U.S. Department of State issued roughly 462,000 immigrant visas in
fiscal year 2019, which began on Oct. 1, 2018. The visas allow an
immigrant to obtain lawful permanent resident status, informally known
as a green card. The status allows a person to live and work in the
United States and apply for citizenship after a five-year period.
Critics viewed Trump's new policy as an effort to distract from his
response to the pandemic.
"I think this is a malevolent distraction," said Neera Tanden, president
of the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning policy institute in
Washington.
Giovanni Peri, an economics professor at the University of California,
Davis, said researchers generally agree that immigration into the United
States has stimulated economic growth, increased the size of the
economy, and created jobs.
"The idea that immigration threatens American jobs is just not there in
any data," he said.
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Mexican immigrants wait beside members of the Mexican army outside
of a National Institute of Migration (INM) building after being
deported from the United States and crossing the Paso del Norte
border bridge amid the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19),
in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico April 21, 2020. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
FANNING FLAMES
Under the separate immigration action, technology industry workers
with H-1B visas may need to provide updated certifications to the
government that they are not displacing American workers. That was
one of a handful of proposals being looked at.
"As a general matter we don't have to close down legal immigration
to reopen America, and that is what we are focused on: safely
reopening and getting the economy going again," said Neil Bradley,
executive vice president and chief policy officer at the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce.
Early in his presidency Trump issued an executive order directing
the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services (USCIS), to tighten its policies on H-1B
visas, which are used heavily by the tech industry to bring in
skilled workers.
Critics of the visas say they have been monopolized by staffing
firms that bring in workers that displace Americans, often in
back-office technical jobs. But the visas are also used by the
healthcare and education sectors and other businesses recruiting
workers who generally have degrees.
The United States has more coronavirus cases than any other country
by far and immigration is effectively cut off anyway at the moment
through border restrictions and flight bans.
Immigration advocates scoffed at the contention that cutting off
immigration was being done to protect Americans' health.
Andrea Flores, a deputy policy director with the American Civil
Liberties Union, which has sued over a number of Trump immigration
policies, said Trump appeared "more interested in fanning
anti-immigrant flames than in saving lives" with his latest
proposal.
The Trump campaign plans to highlight immigration again in the 2020
election battle, and the president regularly highlights progress on
the construction of the wall on the U.S.-Mexican border.
The issue may have less resonance this year, however.
The coronavirus outbreak has dramatically altered priorities among
many Americans over the past few months, especially within Trump's
Republican Party, according to a Reuters/Ipsos public opinion poll.
Its latest survey, conducted April 15-21, found that the economy had
replaced immigration as the most-cited concern for Republicans.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason, Steve Holland and Ted Hesson; additional
reporting by Mica Rosenberg, Chris Kahn, Timothy Ahmann, Doina
Chiacu and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Tom Brown and Rosalba O'Brien)
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