The Biden administration is debating whether and how quickly to fully end the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), also known as the "Remain in Mexico" policy, Michelle Hackman reports for The Wall Street Journal.
The Supreme Court has given the administration the green light to officially terminate the program. But some National Security Council officials say without MPP in place, they are concerned about migrant increases at the U.S.-Mexico border, especially from countries including Cuba and Venezuela. They are also wary about upending continuing
immigration negotiations with the Mexican government and the potential for further legal challenges by Texas and other GOP-led states.
Officials at the Department of Homeland Security, meanwhile, see MPP as too time-consuming and costly. Tent courts at the border for the program are costing ICE tens of millions of dollars as the agency faces a $400 million budget deficit.
Advocates are pushing for quick action, as Jasmine Aguilera notes in TIME magazine. "Every single day [MPP is] in place it’s causing harm, it’s endangering lives, and it’s frankly allowing the Trump Administration to rule from the grave," said Blaine Bookey, legal director of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at the University of California, Hastings.
Welcome to the Monday edition of The Forum Daily. I’m Dan Gordon, the Forum’s strategic communications VP. If you have a story to share from your own community, please send it to me at [email protected].
HELP WANTED — The Biden administration’s plans to produce microchips domestically, including at a site outside of Columbus, Ohio, faces a major stumbling block, Brendan Bordelon and Eleanor Mueller
report in POLITICO: a lack of workers. Immigration reform would offer a solution, but currently the U.S. has "a bewildering and anachronistic immigration system, historic backlogs in visa processing and rising anti-immigrant sentiment have combined to choke off the flow of foreign STEM talent precisely when a fresh [increase] is needed." Meanwhile, business leaders in Nebraska are also looking to immigration reforms to help with severe labor shortages, Cindy Gonzalez of the Nebraska Examiner reports. "There is a real sense of urgency," said Bryan Slone, president of the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce and
Industry. "We’re down 50,000 to 80,000 jobs that we can’t fill. We just don’t have the people."
PERMANENT SOLUTIONS — In an op-ed for San Antonio
Express-News, Brenda Kirk, a South-Central mobilizer for the Forum, lays out a personal appeal for Congress to enact a permanent solution for Dreamers. Andrea Rathbone Ramos, a Dreamer whom Kirk has come to know as a friend, is making a significant impact in San Antonio, she writes. "I join other evangelical
Christians in continuing to pray for Congress to provide Dreamers with the permanent solution they deserve," Kirk writes. "Dreamers such as Ramos support America and make it better. It’s time for Congress to act and show that America supports them, too."
MADE-UP INTERVIEW — Some border agents are denying entry to asylum seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border based on what lawyers say are fictional interviews, per Dianne Solis of The Dallas Morning News. Such is the case for Roxana, originally from El Salvador, who says she was never interviewed — nor were her two
children. Yet federal documents say her 2-year-old son Benjamin confirmed he entered the country to look for work or go to school. "He never said that! He can barely talk," Roxana said. "… They didn’t give us a chance to explain our case … I’m afraid. They could hurt my kids." Such stories increase concerns around expedited removals, in which people are rapidly deported, with few options for recourse.
BORDER NEWS BRIEFS — A few more recent news items related to the border:
- Citing safety concerns, the Biden administration has authorized the completion of border barriers to close four wide gaps near Yuma, Arizona, per Anita Snow of the Associated Press.
- NBC’s Julia Ainsley reports that "U.S.-assisted arrests of smugglers in Central America, far from U.S. soil" may have contributed to the June decrease in migrant crossings and arrests.
- Asylum seekers are struggling to survive in Juárez, Mexico, as they wait for the U.S. to officially repeal Title 42, reports Julian Resendiz for Border Report. Meanwhile, in an op-ed for The Hill, immigration attorney Stephen Yale-Loehr highlights Title 42’s dangers. Separately, Emily Van Fossen of the Niskanen Center
notes that the policy has played into anti-immigration groups’ efforts to misrepresent border data.
WELCOME — The U.S. officially has admitted 100,000 Ukrainians since the Feb. 24 Russian invasion, fulfilling President Biden’s pledge, reports Camilo Montoya-Galvez of CBS News. Meanwhile, the residents of Utah have been very welcoming toward Afghan evacuees, per Peter Suderman and Fiona Harrigan in a Utahns, having a
history of forced migration and persecution, are "very sympathetic to people who are fleeing similar circumstances," said Harrigan. "It helps these new Afghans feel very welcome in the state. I think it’s a thing that really translates to every level of society from the governor’s office to the volunteers, to civil society organizations and every other religious organization in the state."
Elsewhere on the local front:
- Thanks to Tucson, Arizona, City Councilmember Steve Kozachik’s advocacy, Afghan judge Ahmad Wakili, who had been separated from his wife and daughter for a year and a half, was reunited with his family in Phoenix. (Zayna Syed, The Arizona Republic)
- The Sioux City branch of Lutheran Services of Iowa and the Mary J. Treglia Community House are collaborating with the Iowa Department of Transportation to ensure written driver’s license tests and driving courses are available in Pashto and Dari for Afghan evacuees. (Kendall Crawford, Iowa Public Radio)
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