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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWaPo: Biden says he'll reverse Trump immigration policies but wants 'guardrails' first
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/biden-immigration-policy-changes/2020/12/22/2eb9ef92-4400-11eb-8deb-b948d0931c16_story.htmlPresident-elect Joe Biden said Tuesday he will keep his pledge to roll back the Trump administrations restrictive asylum policies but at a slower pace than he initially promised, to avoid winding up with 2 million people on our border. Biden said immigration is one of the urgent matters he will tackle starting next month as the nation emerges from one of the toughest years weve ever faced, ticking off a list that included the coronavirus, the economy, racial-justice issues and historic and punishing wildfires and storms.
Biden had promised to end on Day 1 a program that requires tens of thousands of asylum seekers, mainly from Central America, to await their U.S. immigration hearings in Mexico. But the president-elect said creating a system to process thousands of asylum seekers will take months, because the government needs funding to put staffers such as asylum judges in place. The timeline is to do it so that we, in fact, make it better not worse, Biden said, speaking from his home state of Delaware, delivering remarks ahead of the holiday. I will do what I said. Its going to take not Day 1 its going to take probably the next six months to put that in place.
Advocates for immigrants hope Biden will terminate the return to Mexico policy, known as Migrant Protection Protocols, before the Supreme Court is expected to take it up next year. Biden said he is already working with authorities in Mexico and other Latin American nations, as well as with U.S.-based nonprofit groups, to carve a path on immigration policy. Trust me, he said. Biden said he was not dragging his feet but setting up the guardrails to find a solution to the immigration issue, instead of creating a crisis that complicates what were trying to do. Biden echoed what top advisers said this week to manage expectations about the pace of the new administration as they prepare to take office.
Speaking to reporters on a conference call earlier Tuesday, several members of the Biden transition team said the incoming administration would need time to undo damage to the U.S. immigration system and border enforcement policies that have severely limited the ability of asylum seekers to qualify for humanitarian protection. The transition officials echoed statements made by Susan E. Rice, Bidens incoming domestic policy adviser, and Jake Sullivan, his pick for national security adviser, in an interview published Monday with the Spanish wire service EFE urging patience with their immigration agenda.
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Kablooie
(18,626 posts)They need to undo all the inhuman treatment and systems that Trump instituted as quickly as possible but there also need to be strict standards that must be met to immigrate to the U.S.
Permanent residency in the U.S. must be something that is earned justly and not given away lightly.
I'm sure there will be a fairly long waiting period for all of them even when the system is working properly but of course families must be allowed to stay together and they can't be kept in cages.
Amishman
(5,555 posts)Automation is going to eliminate tens of millions of jobs in the next decade.
Crop picking, trucking, shelf stocking/warehouse, delivery services, cashiers, food service, basic call center / customer support - all of these are highly likely to be categorically eliminated.
We are going to have a financial and humanitarian crisis as low skill jobs fade away.
The above is just talking about what will happen in the US. It will be worse when that same level of automation flows to central and south america. Economic refugee numbers will soar.