Reuters
By Scott Malone
November 16, 2015
More
than a dozen state governors refused on Monday to accept Syrian
refugees after the Paris attacks, part of a mounting Republican backlash
against the Obama administration's
plan to accept thousands more immigrants from the war-torn country.
Leading
Republican presidential candidates called on President Barack Obama to
suspend the plan to accept 10,000 Syrian refugees in the coming year and
some Republican
lawmakers began moves in Congress to try to defund the policy.
The
State Department said the administration would stand by its plan,
reiterating that the refugees would be subject to stringent security
checks, and Obama said that
the terrorism problem should not be equated with the refugee crisis.
But
Republican leaders said it was too risky to allow a further influx of
refugees after Friday's attacks by the Syria-based Islamic State group
that killed 129 people.
The
Republican governors of Maine, Nebraska, Texas, Arkansas, Arizona,
Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Massachusetts, Ohio, North Carolina,
Wisconsin, Georgia and Illinois
joined their counterparts in Alabama and Michigan in saying they would
no longer help settle Syrian refugees. One Democratic governor, Maggie
Hassan of New Hampshire, joined them in rejecting Syrian refugees.
Experts
in immigration law said the governors likely had no legal standing to
block the federal government from settling refugees admitted into the
country, but noted
that they could obstruct the plans by cutting funding to programs and
creating an atmosphere of hostility.
Louisiana
Governor Bobby Jindal, for instance, said he had instructed law
enforcement officials to monitor one Syrian refugee recently resettled
into his state.
A
Syrian passport found near the body of one of the attackers showed that
its holder passed through Greece in October, raising concern that the
attackers had entered Europe
amid the wave of refugees fleeing that country's four-year civil war.
"Texas
cannot participate in any program that will result in Syrian refugees -
any one of whom could be connected to terrorism - being resettled in
Texas," Texas Governor
Greg Abbott said in an open letter to Obama on Monday. "Neither you nor
any federal official can guarantee that Syrian refugees will not be
part of any terroristic activity."
Refugee
advocates argued that the governors and other Republicans are targeting
those who are overwhelmingly victims rather than perpetrators of
extremist violence.
"These
are victims of the same terror that we're so horrified by," said
Melanie Nezer, vice president of policy and advocacy at Jewish nonprofit
refugee service HIAS.
"The impact on people is going to be tragic and the impact on our
reputation as a global humanitarian leader is also going to be tragic."
LEGAL AUTHORITY UNCLEAR
The
United States admitted 1,682 Syrian refugees in the federal fiscal year
that ended Sept. 30, a sharp jump from the 105 admitted a year earlier,
while Europe is struggling
with an influx of hundreds of thousands. Texas, California and Michigan
accepted the largest number of people fleeing the war.
Secretary
of State John Kerry in September said the United States would increase
the number of refugees it takes in from all nations by 15,000 per year
over the next two
years, bringing the total to 100,000 a year by 2017.
"The
federal government has the power over immigration. If they admit Syrian
refugees, they're here," said Deborah Anker, a professor of law at
Harvard Law School who
specializes in immigration issues. "People aren't going to the (state)
border. The federal government is going to bring them in."
Florida
Governor Rick Scott said it was unclear if a governor had the right to
block refugees from entering a state. Instead, he sent a letter to
Congressional Republicans
asking for their help in blocking Syrian refugees from being resettled
in his state.
"We
are asking the U.S. Congress to take immediate and aggressive action to
prevent President Obama and his administration from using any federal
tax dollars to fund the
relocation ... without an extensive evaluation of the risk these
individuals may pose to our national security," Scott wrote.
Republican
lawmaker Brian Babin, a member of the conservative House Freedom
Caucus, circulated a letter to the Republican House leadership
requesting that Obama's plan
be defunded as part of an upcoming spending bill.
Republican
presidential candidates vowed on Monday to take a tougher approach
toward Islamic State, with Donald Trump saying he would consider closing
some mosques and
Ben Carson saying that Congress should cut funding for all programs
that bring people fleeing violence in Syria
On
the Democratic side, the governors of Pennsylvania and Washington State
said they will continue working with the federal government to admit
Syrian refugees.
"Washington
will continue to be a state that welcomes those seeking refuge from
persecution, regardless of where they come from or the religion they
practice," said Washington
Governor Jay Inslee, in a statement.
Alabama and Michigan said they would no longer accept Syrian refugees on Sunday.
Michigan's
Republican governor, Rick Snyder, described his state, which has a
large Arab-American population, as "welcoming" but said the risk
associated with admitting
Syrian refugees was too high.
The
State Department denied that admitted refugees, who are all extensively
screened before being allowed into the country, present any threat and
said it would seek to
alleviate the governors' concerns.
"We
take their concerns seriously," spokesman Mark Toner said of the
governors' statements. "We disagree that these people, individuals
frankly many of them the most vulnerable
(in the region), represent any kind of real threat."
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