Christian Science Monitor
By Patrik Jonsson
June 27, 2014
As a
seemingly unending phalanx of women and children continues to try to
cross into the US from Central America, President Obama has only a few
politically unappetizing options left on the table
for how to ease a humanitarian crisis that critics say is at least
partly his own making.
Fifty
thousand people – mostly women with small children and unaccompanied
alien children (UACs) – have crossed the Rio Grande River in south Texas
this year, and another 40,000 are expected by
October. The vast majority are from noncontiguous countries such as
Honduras and Guatemala, which means US officials can’t just turn them
back at the border. Instead, these women and children are piling up in
US detention centers and being released on their
own recognizance, with a promise to return to immigration court in
months or years.
Most
immediately, the crisis has stalled momentum on Capitol Hill toward
immigration reform. House Republicans are taking the surge of
undocumented women and children as proof that the US border
is too porous to even start talking about a path to legal status or
citizenship for illegal immigrants already in the US.
But the
situation also gives Mr. Obama a new reason to use his executive powers
to bypass a hostile House of Representatives, possibly by expanding his
2012 order that allows thousands of illegal
immigrants who came to the US before the age of 16 to avoid deportation
and work legally. A new executive order, for example, could expand
eligibility to other classes of immigrants, including parents of these
so-called Dreamers.
Democrats
began pushing that option this week, arguing that Republicans have
declared immigration reform “dead” by not offering up a bill, thus
forcing Obama’s hand to act unilaterally. The Democratic-controlled
Senate approved a bipartisan immigration reform bill a year ago Friday,
but the House has not taken it up.
“It’s
fair to say the White House and the president have been pretty
disappointed,” White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Thursday on
MSNBC. “We’re not going to just sit around and wait
interminably for Congress.”
Meanwhile,
the border situation remains fluid and politically explosive. At stake
are not only the future prospects of thousands of illegal immigrants,
but also perhaps the 2014 elections, in which
scenes from an unsettled border may inflame an already-passionate
Republican base and possibly tip control of the Senate away from
Democrats.
“The
timing here couldn’t be worse for the broader immigration debate – both
in terms of the administration’s ability to tell the story about how the
border is more secure and it’s time to move
on to broader reforms … and the fact that there’s a narrative emerging
that previous administrative actions are contributing to unauthorized
migrant children arriving here,” says Marc Rosenblum of the nonpartisan
Migration Policy Institute in Washington.
In
addition, some conservatives have characterized the situation as a
setup. The administration, they say, purposely set the migration surge
into motion to create a border crisis that Obama and
Democrats could cite to expand DACA and take other unilateral executive
actions. (Along those lines, the conservative Drudge Report had this
headline: “Nancy Pelosi to greet new arrivals at border.” The House
minority leader's office on Friday confirmed that
she will be touring the South Texas Detention Facility, as reported,
but that she will not be meeting with the children.")
Such
suspicions have transformed the border crisis into a Republican rallying
cry, including alarms over disease, gangs, and economic harm to
American workers.
Moreover,
according to Eli Kantor, an immigration attorney in Beverly Hills, Calif., Obama appears to be winking at Hispanic immigrants. For example,
while Obama warned Central Americans this week
that their children will be sent back if they cross the border, he also
earlier appropriated $2 million for legal groups to help make asylum
claims for children who have managed to arrive there.
“The president is talking out of both sides of his mouth,” says Mr. Kantor.
Any
citizen of a noncontiguous nation who manages to sneak into the United
States can request asylum once apprehended. The United Nations has
estimated that two-thirds of the arriving unaccompanied
minors may have a case, and US immigration judges, on average, give
asylum to about half of seekers, on the basis of their individual
stories.
The
crisis has begun to take a political toll on prospects for Obama’s
immigration reform strategy. The president met with Department of
Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson this week to mull
over his options, even as word leaked out that the administration may
stay its hand on possible expansion of executive orders on immigration,
so as not to rile Republicans too much before the midterm elections.
Obama
“really is in a very tight place,” Doris Meissner, director of
immigration policy at the Migration Policy Institute, told the
Washington Times. “It’s virtually an impossible situation. It
is not a situation that in any way respects policy and reasonable
discourse. It’s entirely politics.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment