Biden administration doubles down on tough asylum restrictions at border
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[October 01, 2024]
By REBECCA SANTANA
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration said Monday it is making
asylum restrictions at the southern border even tougher, as it's
increasingly eager to show voters uneasy over immigration that it is
taking a hard stance on border security.
The new rules, which toughen restrictions announced in June, bar
migrants from being granted asylum when U.S. officials deem that the
southern border is overwhelmed.
Under the previous rules, the U.S. could restrict asylum access when the
number of migrants trying to enter the country between the official
border crossings hit 2,500 per day. The daily numbers had to average
below 1,500 per day for a week in order for the restrictions to be
lifted.
The version rolled out Monday says the daily numbers will have to be
below 1,500 for nearly a month before the restrictions can be lifted.
And the administration is now counting all children toward that number,
whereas previously only migrant children from Mexico were counted.
These changes, which go into effect on Tuesday, will make it much more
difficult to lift the restrictions and allow people entering the country
between the official border crossings eventually to apply for asylum in
the U.S.
But the restrictions implemented in June have never been lifted because
the numbers of border encounters have never gotten low enough for long
enough, raising the question of why the administration felt the need to
make them even tougher now. The seven-day average has gotten down to
about 1,800 migrant encounters per day, the Department of Homeland
Security said.
A senior administration official said Monday that the longer timeline
was necessary to make sure that drops in immigration are sustained and
not due to a one-time event. The official spoke on condition of
anonymity to brief reporters about the tighter restrictions before they
were made public.
Immigration advocates had harshly criticized the restrictions announced
in June, saying the administration was slashing away at vital
protections for people fleeing persecution.
Many weighed in Monday, saying that by making the rules even tougher the
administration was sending people back into danger and not living up to
its humanitarian obligations.
The American Immigration Lawyers Association said the new rule is
effectively an asylum ban and that the exceptions aren't as substantive
as the administration has made them out to be. The group said at the
current rates of border crossings the asylum restrictions would be in
place indefinitely.
“It is imperative that our nation have safe, orderly, and efficient
processes at the border that also ensure fair and humane treatment of
asylum seekers. The consequences of denying asylum to someone who is
being persecuted can literally be a matter of life or death," the
organization's president, Kelli Stump, said in a statement Monday.
The UN refugee agency said it had “profound concern” about the changes
and that blocking asylum access violates international refugee law and
“the humanitarian principles to which the United States has long been a
leader.”
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Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris talks
with John Modlin, the chief patrol agent for the Tucson Sector of
the U.S. Border Patrol, right, and Blaine Bennett, the U.S. Border
Patrol Douglas Station border patrol agent in charge, as she visits
the U.S. border with Mexico in Douglas, Ariz., Friday, Sept. 27,
2024. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas pushed back on
suggestions that the updated rules amounted to an asylum ban. He
said there were exceptions built into the rule for people who
qualify and pointed to other programs such as an online appointment
app the U.S. has that allows people to come to the U.S. and seek
asylum.
“We have not cut off our asylum system,” the secretary said.
The exceptions include victims of a severe form of trafficking, who
would still be allowed to apply for asylum.
The administration also allows people using its CBP One appointment
system to apply for asylum, but those people must schedule an
appointment on the app to come to an official border crossing point.
The administration has encouraged migrants to use that app instead
of crossing the border illegally.
But demand far exceeds the 1,450 appointments available daily, and
the administration has not indicated that it will increase the
number of appointments.
The administration has touted its asylum restrictions, saying they
have led to serious drops in the number of migrants coming to the
southern border. The Department of Homeland Security said Monday
that since the changes were announced in June, the daily number of
people encountered by Border Patrol between the legal border
crossings has fallen over 50%.
In a statement announcing the new rules, DHS called on Congress to
do more to solve immigration problems.
Border security and immigration are a key weakness for the Biden
administration and Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic
presidential nominee.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and others from his
party have hammered away at the high numbers of migrants who’ve come
to the southern border under the Biden administration, saying the
White House and Harris haven’t done enough to restrict migration and
secure the border.
Harris visited a border region of Arizona on Friday, her first visit
as the Democratic nominee. She walked along the tall metal fence
separating the U.S. from Mexico and called for a tightening of
asylum rules while pushing for a better way to welcome immigrants
legally.
“I reject the false choice that suggests we must choose either
between securing our border and creating a system that is orderly,
safe and humane,” Harris said. “We can and we must do both.”
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