Trump and Biden take sharply different paths on immigration
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[September 10, 2020]
By John Whitesides and Ted Hesson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump's push to crack down on illegal immigration and reshape
legal immigration was at the heart of the Republican's winning 2016
campaign and has remained at the forefront of his White House agenda.
Former Vice President Joe Biden, the likely Democratic challenger in
this year's presidential election, promises to rescind many of the
policies put in place by Trump's administration and instead advance his
own platform if he wins on Nov. 3.
Here is a look at some of their immigration stances.
CORONAVIRUS IMMIGRATION RESTRICTIONS
Trump has dramatically curtailed immigration and travel into the United
States during the coronavirus pandemic, arguing the steps were needed
for health reasons and to protect jobs for U.S. workers in the face of
high unemployment.
During the pandemic, Trump has restricted the entry of many foreign
workers and immigrants seeking "green cards" for permanent residency.
Biden tweeted at the time that Trump was banning immigrants to distract
from his administration's pandemic response and that "immigrants help
grow our economy and create jobs."
Trump also implemented a public health emergency policy that allows U.S.
officials to rapidly deport migrants caught at the U.S.-Mexico border,
including unaccompanied minors and asylum seekers, bypassing standard
legal processes.
Biden has said he will pause deportations for 100 days after taking
office, but he has not yet said if he would immediately reverse Trump's
sweeping pandemic-related restrictions.
When the Trump administration announced plans in July to restrict the
entry of some foreign students to the United States, a policy it later
had to rescind, Biden tweeted support for international students, saying
they bring innovation to the country.
'DREAMERS'
The Supreme Court ruled in June against Trump's 2017 decision to end the
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which protects
from deportation immigrants popularly known as "Dreamers," who were
brought to the United States as children and have remained in the
country illegally.
The high court's ruling - which found Trump's termination of the program
was "arbitrary and capricious" - left the administration the option to
try again to end it.
The Trump administration issued a memo in July that clamped down on DACA,
blocking new enrollment and allowing only renewals that last one year,
less than the current two-year period.
Launched by then-President Barack Obama in 2012, DACA grants deportation
relief and work permits to about 644,000 mostly Hispanic young adults,
but does not provide them a path to citizenship.
Biden has said he would reverse Trump's "cruel" decision and strengthen
protections for Dreamers.
He said he would make Dreamers eligible for federal student aid for
college, and would back legislation that provides a path to citizenship
for them as part of efforts to do so for all of the estimated 11 million
immigrants living in the country illegally, including those who did not
arrive as children.
Trump's administration has prioritized arresting immigration violators
regardless of their criminal histories or length of time in the United
States.
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Democratic U.S. presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe
Biden speaks about his plan to create jobs and U.S. President
Trump's handling of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) response
during a campaign stop in Warren, Michigan, U.S., September 9, 2020.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
U.S.-MEXICO BORDER WALL
Trump's promises to build a wall along the southwest border and to
force Mexico to pay for it were the centerpiece of his hard-line
immigration rhetoric during the 2016 campaign, energizing his
supporters and enraging Democrats.
The administration has completed 275 miles (443 km) of border wall,
with a goal of 450 miles (720 km) by the end of the year, but nearly
all of those barriers replaced existing structures, according to
U.S. border officials. Mexico has refused to pay for any of the
construction, leaving the U.S. government to foot the bill,
partially with billions of dollars in Pentagon funds.
Federal court records show the Trump administration has ramped up
efforts to seize more land for the barrier.
Biden said in August that he would not tear down border walls built
under Trump, but would halt construction.
Biden's immigration plan would end the diversion of Pentagon funding
to build the wall and focus instead on border enforcement like
investments in improving the screening infrastructure at ports of
entry.
FAMILY SEPARATIONS
Trump's 2018 "zero-tolerance" policy to prosecute illegal border
crossings led to several thousand children being forcibly separated
from parents and legal guardians detained on the Mexico border.
The policy, described by the administration as a deterrent, sparked
outrage, and the backlash led Trump to sign an executive order to
end the practice. But the administration continued to separate
hundreds of kids traveling with other adult relatives.
Biden would end the prosecution of parents for minor immigration
violations, which he calls an "intimidation tactic," and make it a
priority to reunite any children still separated from their
families.
TRAVEL BAN
Trump signed an order in January 2017 banning entry to immigrants
from seven Muslim-majority countries, a move Biden and other critics
say discriminated against Muslims. A federal court blocked the
initial ban, but in 2018 the Supreme Court upheld an amended version
that has since been expanded to other countries.
The version upheld by the Supreme Court places restrictions on
travelers from five majority-Muslim nations - Iran, Libya, Somalia,
Syria and Yemen. North Korea and Venezuela also face visa bars, but
those measures affect relatively few travelers.
Trump placed restrictions on six additional countries in January,
including Nigeria and three other African nations.
Biden has promised to rescind the bans, calling them an abuse of
power "designed to target primarily black and brown immigrants."
(Reporting by John Whitesides and Ted Hesson in Washington; editing
by Colleen Jenkins, Jonathan Oatis, Mica Rosenberg and Sonya
Hepinstall)
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