Archive for the ‘Immigration Reform’ Category

New Policy Allows Immigrants To Be Deported Without Appearing In Immigration Court – WBEZ

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is expanding a policy to deport immigrants quickly by not allowing them to see an immigration judge.

Previously, the expedited removal policy has been implemented only for immigrants detained within 100 miles of the U.S. borders with Canada or Mexico. Under an expanded policy, immigration agents nationwide have the power to decide if a person is undocumented and has been living in the country less than two years, thus making them eligible for deportation. The move allows for immigrants to be deported without having to appear in immigration court.

Our ability to implement this important statutory tool will further enable us to protect our communities and preserve the integrity of our nations congressionally mandated immigration laws, Tony Pham, the interim ICE director, said on Wednesday announcing the policy change.

Officials said expanding the scope of this policy will keep dangerous criminals from entering communities to potentially reoffend.

But advocates say expanding this policy will not only result in federal agents targeting undocumented immigrants but also visa holders or anyone who cant immediately prove their citizenship or immigration status. And since anyone arrested by agents will be removed without seeing a judge, advocates worry some immigrants could be deported by accident.

People may have to start carrying those documents to, in fact, show that they have been here for two years or documentation that they are citizens, said Fred Tsao, policy director for the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. What this policy does is essentially open the door for massive racial profiling, particularly for Latinx and other people of color.

Rey Wences, a community organizer with Organized Communities Against Deportation, has concerns about how this policy will be enforced.

We have seen the way in which immigration enforcement has played out and a lot of these policies end up targeting Black and brown immigrants, said Wences.

Advocates said they are further worried about the implementation of the new policy following news that the Trump Administration cant find the parents of 545 children who were separated from their parents at the border under his no tolerance immigration policy.

Theres been little to no accountability, Wences said.

The expedited removal policy was announced by the Trump administration in 2019 but a federal judge blocked it. In June, the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia lifted the preliminary injunction allowing the agency to move forward with the expansion of this policy.

There are several categories of deportations that can be done bypassing the nations overwhelmed immigration court system. The category for expedited removals was created in 1996 as part of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigration Responsibility Act.

The administration of former President Barack Obama utilized several categories of deportations that bypassed the immigration court system to deport a record number of immigrants. For example, between 2008 and 2011, more than 25,000 immigrants from the Chicago area of responsibility which covers Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri and Wisconsin were deported without having their cases heard in immigration court. These deportations accounted for 57 percent of all deportations during that span, according to a Chicago Reporter investigation.

Mara Ins Zamudio is a reporter for WBEZs Race, Class and Communities desk. Follow her @mizamudio.

Originally posted here:
New Policy Allows Immigrants To Be Deported Without Appearing In Immigration Court - WBEZ

The President and Immigration Law Series: Reflections on the Future of American Immigration Policy – Just Security

[Editors note: Over the past two weeks, Just Security has published a series of articles responding to the new book, The President and Immigration Law, by Cristina Rodrguez and Adam Cox. The series brought together expert voices on immigration policy and reform. In this response essay, Rodriguez and Cox reflect on these contributions and the path forward for building better immigration law, through presidential power and other means. All articles in the series can be found here.]

Enforcement drives American immigration policymaking today. The wonderful essays in this series responding to our book all reflect this reality, and taken together they underscore two crucial points.

First, they highlight the great human cost of the regime. Josiah Heymans contribution in particular reminds us of what is so often elided in policy debates that the border is not an abstraction, but rather a populated American environment, a physical space filled with complex lives. He captures how high-level acts like declarations of emergency effectively erase what is otherwise a state of normalcy in the borderlands, compounding the racist and reductionist ways policymakers and many Americans conceive of the need for immigration policing at the nations supposed outer edges. His account of the borderlands brings into the most acute relief how abstract or theoretical debates over the politys right to construct itself by deciding whom to let in cannot be divorced from the everyday experience of immigration policing and the vibrant, migratory lives it disrupts.

Second, the essays offer a range of options for transforming this system either by taming the machinery of enforcement or repositioning it around an entirely new paradigm of regulation. These suggestions for the path forward fit into three broad categories of change we discuss in the book, and we offer here some final reflections along those lines. We begin with the reform tools that will be most readily available, if and when the government changes hands: reforms to the bureaucracy headed by the executive and rescission and reformulation of past administrative policies. We next discuss the role we can expect courts to play and then consider how Congress and the executive working together might amend existing legal authorities to tame the enforcement logic. Finally, we revisit the most difficult questions we began to explore in the books epilogue: what would it take to significantly demote or even eliminate the enforcement logic from immigration policymaking altogether? Do the histories and policies interwoven in these essays give us any reason to believe that such transformation is possible?

Reforming (and Exploiting) the Bureaucracy

It may well be that the best we can do to make our system more humane will be through executive fiat. So lets begin there.

Tom Jawetz launches his essay with a bracing premise: that the next administration should exploit its immigration authorities as ruthlessly as the current one. Arguably with a grudging admiration of the comprehensive way in which the Trump administration has utilized and reconfigured the bureaucracy to serve its ends, he advocates a similar nesting strategy, but with humanitarian and immigration-enhancing goals in mind. Lucas Guttentag, too, acknowledges that the very same tools deployed by the current administration could be used to great effect if an administration that prioritizes immigrant admissions and integration, as well as humane treatment, comes into place. He reminds us of the inescapable tradeoff in bureaucratic administration between the virtues of deliberation and consultation on the one hand and the urgency of action on the other. Essays such as Margo Schlangers, which underscore the grotesque overreach of civil immigration detention, and Heymans, which highlights the militaristic fantasy at the border, call our attention to the urgency side of the equation and therefore to the inescapable need for executive action.

The question, of course, becomes whether it is possible to identify bureaucratic reforms with staying power those that might have lasting effects versus those that amount to on/off switches, to be undone easily by successors. Heyman and Schlanger offer the sort of internal bureaucratic reforms that might last, because they focus on creating lines of supervision, or actual structural controls on line-level discretion. Guttentag, too, makes a crucial structural point: that presidents and their administrations hire the civil servants who will outlast them civil servants who are not automatons who simply apply some objective version of the law but who instead hold worldviews that will infuse their judgments.This is a lesson in personnel that a new administration will hopefully learn quickly.

The larger hope for the sorts of executive actions highlighted throughout the series is that they will serve as predicates, or priming strategies, for a deeper transformation. Jawetz reminds us how executive action can help set the terms of larger political debate and shape the measures Congress might adopt. Executive-granted discretionary statuses may be tenuous in themselves, but their extension nonetheless shifts the window of what might be politically possible or necessary as well as the status quo against which subsequent decisions will be assessed by the public and judiciary. This is the story to date of DACA, after all.

Jawetz discusses one example of this iterative development of protection, beginning with discretionary forbearance and progressing to legal protection. Liberians were first granted a discretionary status known as Deferred Enforced Departure by the president in 2007; a series of extensions of this status eventually led Congress to grant permanent residency in the National Defense Authorization Act of 2020. We have seen this one-two policy progression, led by the executive branch, time and again in immigration history. Indeed, in the book, we highlight how the bureaucratic creativity that presidents have used to advance their immigration agendas has pushed Congress to act with lasting and permanent effect. These dynamics demonstrate how structural dynamism within the executive can shape political debate.

And yet, there is still something too ad hoc, too contingent, about these strategies. They keep us stuck in an endless cycle of counterpunching and adaptation. As we argue in the book, these swings also exact a human cost; uncertainty can cause emotional and psychological suffering and impose economic costs in the form of foregone investment by immigrants uncertain if they will be able to remain. Even as these bureaucratic and administrative measures represent the most realistic options for (temporary) change, then, the undercurrent of these essays runs toward imagining a better system altogether.

A Role for the Courts

Much of the Trump immigration agenda is in various stages of litigation. Indeed, the Supreme Court just granted certiorari on two major initiatives the attempt to reallocate military funds to construction of the border wall and the so-called Remain in Mexico policy for asylum seekers at the southern border. And yet the courts have played a valuable but limited role in immigration policymaking over the past several decades. The immediate reason for this limited emphasis is that much of what we have described is beyond court supervision it is part of the daily operation of the immigration enforcement system that courts typically do not oversee. The somewhat optimistic story of judicial review we tell in the book, even if correct, still operates at best on the margins of the system, mainly by slowing executive action through the application of procedural requirements, as the DACA decision illustrates.

But as Nicholas Espiritu and Guttentag emphasize, the courts have taken troubling turn in the last couple of years. In Trump v. Hawaii, as we have argued separately and together, the Court broke sharply with past precedent, holding that Trumps ban on immigrants from several majority-Muslim nations was constitutional regardless of whether the president was motivated by religious animosity. Since our book went to press things have only gotten worse. In Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam, the Court held that noncitizens apprehended shortly after crossing the border have neither due process rights nor any right to challenge the governments decision to deport them in court. This is more than mere deference to the executive: it is, as one of has argued, a categorical rejection of noncitizens rights that the Supreme Court has carefully reserved for more than a century permission to Congress to trample those rights if it suits lawmakers policy or political goals.

In each of these cases, the Court is not just allowing executive action to go unchecked, but it is also upholding or validating a statutory scheme that relies on congressional power to limit immigrants rights and court supervision. The Court is thus validating the collaboration between the political branches that has given us the current enforcement regime critiqued in our book and throughout this series. The Court is also insulating from constitutional review the statutory structures that have enabled the enforcement abuses brought to light by the authors of the series.

Perhaps perversely, this developing world is one in which executive discretion may in fact be the only source of hope, as long as Congress retains the most sweeping features of the enforcement edifice it has created. In a world in which Congress has the power to authorize expedited removal removal without meaningful procedures of any kind of any non-citizen who cannot show she has been in the United States for more than two years, only gratuitous executive discretion restrains this sweeping power. Indeed, before Trump, no administration had used expedited removal to its maximum extent as authorized by Congress. The Supreme Court has now cleared the way for the enforcement vision of immigration policy to rule, and the question becomes how to change the underlying structure of the laws so that hope rests on more than the prospect of a benevolent or well-intentioned executive.

Changing the Law

The contributions point to a number of reforms to the law itself, beyond those we highlight in the book, that would dramatically move us away from the enforcement logic of the system. Jawetzs reminder that our system of laws contains many that are not worth enforcing or not possible to enforce consistently necessarily leads us to this form of inquiry.

Some of the statutory reforms we would consider salutary would be crystalline and simple and yet transformative. Heyman reminds us that the border zone is a legally defined construct and that Congress could choose to define it more narrowly not as 100 miles into the interior, but perhaps 30, 20, or 10 miles past the line on the map that forms the shape of the United States and demarcates the vast land and coastal boundaries of the nation. Jawetz notes that the registry provisions, which should allow for regularization of status for certain undocumented immigrants, could once again fulfil this function if the date in the Code were updated (it has not been changed since 1986). Indeed, we would go so far as to advocate delegating the authority to the executive branch to update (but not backdate) this provision, in the spirit of using the virtues and not just the vices of executive governance to keep our system of laws current. Taking inspiration from Schlanger, Congress could limit the purposes for which detention is used and require individualized bond hearings to justify detention, unmaking both the mandatory components of its detention regime and shifting the resources allocated for detention to other purposes.

Espiritu, too, is right to point to the need to rethink expressly delegated authorities, many of which Trump has exploited to maximal effect. Many of these do not involve enforcement, per se, but do embody the logic of exclusion or expulsion. The presidents authority to exclude noncitizens, delegated in Section 212(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), demands standards to guide the discretion given, if this emergency power is to be retained at all. And we ourselves would balance a better-defined exclusion power with a delegated authority to admit on a large-scale basis, so that the presidents suite of crisis management tools include not only those that allow the prevention of threats but also reflect the humanitarian imperative to shelter, consistent with longstanding U.S. leadership and international law obligations.

As Espiritu also points out, the Trump administrations public charge rule offers a good example of a delegation whose effect the executive has the power to determine it can be rendered toothless or exacting as a tool of exclusion. The continued, undefined persistence of the concept of public charge in the Code is an example of how the INA amounts to a mix of old and new priorities layered on top of each other that do not form a coherent theory for immigration. A thorough rethinking of the system would comb through the Code to find exploitable and malleable features such as this one, with a view to substantially narrowing their reach or even eliminating them altogether.

A New Politics

At the end of our book, we offer a distinct vision for immigration reform that moves past the enforcement logic of the current system. Many of the contributions to this series also seek to reframe how we should understand both migration as a phenomenon and the way immigrants can and should be incorporated into the body politic.

Alan Bersin expressly reminds us how interconnected immigration remains with foreign policy, and his post is in the tradition of trying to imagine American immigration law as part of the nations integration with the rest of the world a vision under serious strain but whose revival would in fact resolve many of the complications of the current system by de-emphasizing the border itself, which in turn would diminish the pressure for its fortification.

Many of the contributions foreground humanitarianism, elevating in their accounts the human experiences of cruelty and stress above the legal formalities of status and abstract theories of deterrence. Jawetz and Schlanger both call for a different concept of enforcement, where the tools are distinct, more humane, restorative, even. These are not so much calls to abolish ICE or enforcement altogether, but rather to make it actually possible for people to come into compliance with the law without removing them or subjecting them to trauma in the process.

Implicit in these reformulations is acceptance of the risk of under-deterrence or non-compliance as the price of humanity and a recognition that current theories of enforcement that emphasize deterrence do not reflect a reality in which compliance with the law is functionally possible, either for those with deep ties to the country or those fleeing extreme violence and other forms of deprivation. Implicit also in these propositions is an acceptance of the need for enforcement once its terms have been made more reasonable and opened up for continual adaptation through inclusion and not just expulsion.

Contributors to this series seem to have adopted this approach at least in part as an attempt to answer rule of law narratives by joining them. These arguments suggest that policies regularizing status serve to re-enforce public faith in the system by ensuring that the formerly unauthorized have complied with the law in a fashion deemed sufficient by enforcement authorities. We acknowledge both the strategic and substantive value of this frame. As we explore in chapter 8 of the book, a responsible approach to governance and reform requires both technical and conceptual experimentation within a legal structure that accepts that immigration laws must exist in some form. We do not doubt that large-scale failures to comply with the law erode the credibility of the government and the law itself. Non-compliance also enables the public to ignore the interests of human beings who happen to have violated the law.

All of the alternate visions offered by participants in this series draw from resources in our collective history. But the direction of the political debate is not inevitable. And whereas narratives of exclusion, threat, and sovereign and popular control resonate viscerally with swaths of the electorate, especially when paired with nationalistic sentiment, humanitarian appeals can often come across as overly idealistic. We would venture to suggest that this asymmetry in the emotional power of our conflicting narratives helps explain the virtual absence of truly popular movements in favor of a more open immigration policy from our history, even as public opinion polls often reflect majority support for immigrationin todays world support for Dreamers and legalization and revulsion to family separation.

Collectively, the essays also prompt us to ask a question we explore only indirectly in our book for what reasons did this system, both punitive and futile, come to be? In the book, we trace the rise of our contingent, probationary model of immigration alongside the development of state capacity to make it effective. Lasting reform away from this enforcement model demands a disruption of the political economy that has produced the border lands as zones of racist discretion, generated the gargantuan detention regime, and made the future of immigration policy depend on zealous advocacy of one kind or another within the executive branch.

Each of the contributions in this series suggests one part of the story of how we got here: the desire for cultural and racial preservation; a legislative and appropriations process that finds it easy and politically effective to fund armaments; ambivalence about the American relationship to the rest of the world, especially the world that physically encroaches on American territory. Whatever the correct explanatory account, we think that generating the political pressure necessary to advance reform depends in part on what each contributor reminds us, in different ways: that truly enforcing our immigration laws as currently designed requires self-defeating cruelty, and that at every level of government, not least at the level of the presidency, we can do better.

Link:
The President and Immigration Law Series: Reflections on the Future of American Immigration Policy - Just Security

Editorial: With misgivings, vote Trump for president and Inslee for governor – The Spokesman-Review

The Spokesman-Review has endorsed candidates for more than 70 years. Our endorsements reflect the publishers views and are made independently of news coverage.

Over the decades, publishers have shifted from solidly Republican to a more centrist, pragmatic and pro-business view, prioritizing candidates and policies that would best serve the Inland Northwest.

As both major political parties have retreated to extremes in recent years, finding such candidates has become increasingly difficult. This years gubernatorial and presidential races exemplify that challenge. There are no ideal candidates among the serious contenders.

Therefore, with significant misgivings on both counts, we recommend voters re-elect Washingtons Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee and Republican President Donald Trump.

Its been nearly 50 years since Washingtonians elected a governor to a third term, but given the state Republican Partys inability to field a strong candidate in this years race, Gov. Jay Inslee should get one.

Theres a lot to worry about with another Inslee term, not least that the governor has seemed more focused on national and global issues than on the issues hitting his own state the hardest. He has spent more time running for president and railing against climate change than addressing homelessness, a far more critical concern to the state.

The distracted governor also remains oblivious to big and small business concerns outside the Puget Sound, especially agricultural industries.

He is beholden to public employee unions and an opponent of education reform and accountability.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Inslee led by executive order far longer than necessary rather than work with lawmakers. On his watch, the Washington Employment Security Department flailed and got ripped off by scammers.

Despite all that, hes the better choice. Republican Loren Culp is token opposition. Hes the police chief in Republic (population: 1,105) who made a name for himself fighting regulations on firearms. Thats not the rsum of a governor.

Inslee offers deep experience working on state policy and executive leadership skills. Washington at least knows what its getting with him.

Donald Trump is a bully and a bigot. He is symptomatic of a widening partisan divide in the country. We recommend voting for him anyway because the policies that Joe Biden and his progressive supporters would impose on the nation would be worse.

The list of Trumps offenses is long. He panders to racists and prevents sensible immigration reform in a nation built on immigrant labor and intellect. He tweets conspiracy theories. Hes cavalier about COVID-19 and has led poorly through the pandemic. He seeks to dismantle the Affordable Care Act without proposing a replacement. He denies climate change.

Voters knew his character in 2016 and elected him anyway. Four years later, the nation is still standing. Indeed, in many ways it flourished until the pandemic upended everything.

The economy and markets roared under Trumps championship of market-based solutions and individualism. Unemployment among communities of color reached record lows. He reset trade and diplomatic relationships in Americas favor. He provided historically high support for traditionally Black colleges. He rolled back extreme environmental regulations and led the way for U.S. energy independence. He backed federal sentencing reform to address inordinately high American incarceration rates. And hes committed to supporting law and order in American cities.

Biden might win on personality and comity, but his policies would strike at the economic well-being of the country. He favors massive growth in government and a historic increase in federal spending through green initiatives, free health services, free education and other ideas grounded in reliance on the state as savior rather than creating an environment in which individual liberty and hard work can thrive. Public employee unions would hold outsized power and demand greater spending.

To afford it all, Biden and a Democrat-controlled Congress would have to impose unprecedented tax increases or accept catastrophic deficit spending.

Taxes and spending likely would increase under Trump, too, but the nation stands a better chance of moderation and reform with him in the White House than it does with Biden pushed left by progressives intent on reshaping America to fit their fantastical vision.

This is an election that pits a wretched human being whose policies and instincts for helping America thrive are generally correct against a doddering, doting uncle who would hand out gifts the nation cant afford in order to win peoples love. Given that choice, economic policy and principle should prevail. Vote for Donald Trump.

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Editorial: With misgivings, vote Trump for president and Inslee for governor - The Spokesman-Review

Opinion: We still need immigration solutions – Gainesville Times

Republicans are to blame. Democrats are to blame. All are to blame, as for decades presidents, Congress and government bureaucrats have employed one Band-aid approach after another to try and fix the problem without any real comprehensive, sustainable effort that has a legitimate chance to succeed.

Obama became known as the king of deportations for the number that happened under his watch. Trump promised to build a wall to keep the illegal immigrants out, though that has not happened on the sort of scale he proposed. Congress, well who knows what a divided Congress wants to do?

Meanwhile millions of illegal immigrants live in fear of what may eventually happen to them, even as entire industries are built on having those same immigrants available to perform duties essential to the nations economy. On the one hand, in our public schools we educate children here illegally with their families to prepare them to be productive adults, while on the other we threaten to deport those same children with their families, and make any pathway to citizenship extremely difficult.

Controlling immigration was one of the bedrock issues of Trumps winning campaign four years ago but has little profile this year, having been pushed aside by a pandemic and national economic concerns and perhaps downplayed because it now is obvious there are no simple solutions to the problem, which is easier to address with heated rhetoric than workable policy.

On the core issues of the immigration debate, are we closer to a long-term solution than we were four years ago? It is hard to say that we are.

As a nation, we cant even agree on whether those in the country illegally should be counted in the Census that is done every 10 years. The Trump administration said not to do so, the courts said differently, and still the question of whether those who were counted will ultimately be included in the Census totals used for allocations of political representation are unresolved.

If they are not included, states like California and Texas, with high numbers of illegal residents, will lose congressional seats, while others will gain representation. Those same numbers will then filter down to state and local apportionment processes, so that communities with sizeable illegal populations will lose political clout, and the access to funding for government programs that goes with it. Gainesville certainly has something to lose in the Census number debate.

The full scope of the immigration problem is one that has plagued presidents of both parties for years, predating Trump, predating Obama. It is an issue that demands big-picture thinking and coalition building leadership, replete with human compassion and economic common sense. That sort of political leadership has sadly been lacking at the top levels of government for a long time.

Immigration reform is not at the forefront of this years presidential campaign, nor should it be until we have found a way to get the pandemic under control and the economy on the right path. But the need for action is still very much there.

And it doesnt matter who built the cages, as long as they are never used for the same purpose again.

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Opinion: We still need immigration solutions - Gainesville Times

Trump Claims Only Immigrants With The Lowest IQ Show Up For Court Hearings In Appalling Debate Rant – NowThis

Joe Biden also blasted President Trump over a new report that lawyers cannot find the parents of 545 migrant children separated from their families under the Trump administration, saying, its criminal.By Versha Sharma

Published on 10/23/2020 at 1:17 AM

President Trump at the final presidential debate on October 22, 2020 in Tennessee. (Getty Images)

President Trump at the final presidential debate on October 22, 2020 in Tennessee. (Getty Images)

At the final presidential debate before voting concludes on November 3, President Trump deflected blame when pressed about his administration effectively orphaning 545 migrant children, falsely claiming they came to the U.S. with coyotes and cartels, and claimed only undocumented immigrants with the lowest IQ, they might come back to attend their immigration hearings.

Moderator Kristen Welker asked President Trump Thursday night about a disturbing report released Wednesday that said lawyers could not find the parents of 545 migrant children who were separated from their families at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Mr. President, your administration separated children from their parents at the border, at least 4,000 kids. Youve since reversed your zero tolerance policy. But the United States cant locate the parents of more than 500 children. So how will these families ever be reunited? Welker asked.

Trump responded that the children are brought here by coyotes and lots of bad people, cartels. Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, during the debate, and immigrant rights groups on Twitter immediately fact-checked his claim.

Coyotes didn't bring them over. Their parents were with them, Biden said in his rebuttal. They got separated from their parents and it makes us a laughingstock and violates every notion of who we are as a nation.

Biden continued, regarding migrant parents: Their kids were ripped from their arms and separated, and now they cannot find over 500 of sets of those parents. And those kids are alone. Nowhere to go, nowhere to go. It's criminal. It's criminal.

On the topic of immigration, Trump went on to make an appalling claim that only people with the lowest IQ might show up for their scheduled immigration court hearings.

He was talking about the catch and release policy, which allows undocumented migrants who are intercepted at the border to stay in the U.S. while they wait for hearings on their cases.

We have to send ICE out and Border Patrol out to find them. We would say come back in two years, three years, were going to give you a court case, you need Perry Masonwhen you say they come back, they dont come back, Joe. They never come back. Only the really.... Trump drew the last word out, before stopping himself and then saying, I hate to say this, but those with the lowest IQ, they might come back.

Biden was visibly dismayed by the comment, closing his eyes and shaking his head in response before Welker asked that they move on.

Trump claimed that less than 1% of immigrants in these cases show up for their court hearings, which is not true. A majority attend their hearings; Politifact says around 60-75% of non-detained migrants attend their immigration court proceedings.

Journalists and immigrant rights advocates on Twitter were quick to point out the appalling and blatant racism in Trumps claim:

Lawyers appointed by a federal judge to search for the parents of the separated children have yet to track down the parents of 545 children, and about "two-thirds of [them] are believed to be in their respective countries of origin, according to a court filing Tuesday by ACLU and Department of Justice officials.

Though Welker said Trump ended his zero tolerance policy, reporters have noted that family separation has continued in 2020, with the administration using the COVID-19 pandemic as a cover.

At the debate, Trump tried to pivot away from the story and kept accusing Biden of having a role in the Obama administration building the cages that Trump has used for family detention, in often miserable conditions. Obama administration officials have said in the past that they built detention centers in order to house an influx of migrants, including unaccompanied teenagersbut they did not use them to cage children forcibly separated from their parents by the U.S. government.

As NPR noted, theres one key difference between the two policies: the Obama administration detained apprehended immigrant children with their parents, while the Trump administration separated children from their parents, which is what Welker was asking about at the debate Thursday night.

Trump also tried to defend family separation and the detention of children by saying they were well taken care of in these facilities, though human rights organizations have published reports on the dismal conditions at many ICE detention centers.

Welker also pressed Biden on his time in the Obama administration and their record on immigration reform. Biden acknowledged, We made a mistake. It took too long to get it right.

He continued: Ill be president of the United States, not vice president of the United States. And the fact is, Ive made it very clear within 100 days, Im going to send to the United States Congress a pathway to citizenship for over 11 million undocumented people. All of those so-called DREAMers, those DACA kids, theyre going to be immediately certified again, to be able to stay in this country and put on a path to citizenship.

In a contrast with Trumps frequent depiction of immigrants as rapists and criminals, Biden said, Many of them are model citizens. Over 20,000 of them are first responders out there taking care of people. During this crisis, we owe them. We owe them.

There was a record number of deportations under Obamaso much so that immigration reform advocates called him the deporter-in-chief. Many of those advocates praised Biden for owning up to the mistakes.

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Trump Claims Only Immigrants With The Lowest IQ Show Up For Court Hearings In Appalling Debate Rant - NowThis