U.S. Supreme Court weighs 'remain in Mexico' immigration dispute
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[April 26, 2022]
By Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court on Tuesday is set to consider President Joe Biden's bid to rescind
a hardline immigration policy begun under his predecessor Donald Trump
that forced tens of thousands of migrants to stay in Mexico to await
U.S. hearings on their asylum claims.
The justices are scheduled to hear oral arguments in a Biden
administration appeal of a lower court ruling that reinstated Trump's
"remain in Mexico" policy after the Republican-led states of Texas and
Missouri sued to maintain the program. Biden suspended the policy, which
changed longstanding U.S. practice, shortly after taking office last
year.
Trump's administration adopted the policy, formally known as the
"Migrant Protection Protocols," in response to an increase in migration
along the U.S.-Mexican border in 2018. The policy prevented certain
non-Mexican migrants, including asylum seekers fearing persecution in
their home countries, from being released into the United States to
await immigration proceedings, instead returning them to Mexico.
The dispute centers on how much discretion the Supreme Court, which has
a 6-3 conservative majority, thinks Biden and his administration have to
change course on immigration policy.
In its appeal to the justices, Biden's administration said it is being
"forced to reinstate and indefinitely continue a controversial policy"
that exposes migrants to safety risks, harms relations with Mexico and
is not the best tool for deterring illegal immigration.
The administration also said that the lower courts are unacceptably
interfering with the historically broad authority that U.S. presidents
have held over immigration and foreign affairs - a principle that the
Supreme Court has long endorsed including in cases when Trump was
president.
At issue in the case is the meaning of a provision of a 1996 U.S.
immigration law that says U.S. officials "may return" certain immigrants
to Mexican territory pending immigration proceedings. Biden's
administration said the provision is "unmistakably" discretionary and
that the lower court's decision means that every presidential
administration "has been in open and systemic violation" of the law
since it was created.
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People visit the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, U.S.
March 15, 2022. REUTERS/Emily Elconin/File Photo
Administrations prior to Trump's presidency had used the provision
on a limited basis. For migrants who do not pose a security risk,
immigration law separately allows their release into the United
States pending a hearing, a practice that officials have followed
for decades.
Roughly 68,000 people fell under the "remain in Mexico" policy from
the time it took effect in 2019 until Biden suspended it in 2021.
Biden's fellow Democrats and immigration advocates criticized the
Trump policy, saying migrants stuck in Mexican border cities have
faced kidnappings and other dangers.
The number of migrants caught crossing the U.S.-Mexico border has
reached record highs recently. Republicans have criticized Biden's
immigration policies and contend that the "remain in Mexico" policy
effectively deterred unlawful migration.
Texas and Missouri challenged the Biden administration's move to
scrap the policy, including a memo terminating the program issued
last June.
After a federal judge reinstated the program, the Supreme Court last
August refused a Biden administration request to block that ruling
while the government pursued an appeal.
The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in
December that because the government does not have the capacity to
detain all migrants who are not eligible for admission pending a
hearing, it must maintain "remain in Mexico."
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
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