With less than two weeks before the deadline, 41 states and 86 local governments have filed letters with the federal government permitting refugee resettlement in accordance with President Trump’s executive order, reports Bekah McNeel in Christianity Today. “As GOP governors weighed their decision, the Associated Press reported that evangelical Christians presented the strongest political counterpoint to the pressure those governors felt from immigration hardliners. The Evangelical Immigration Table delivered petitions signed by evangelicals to 15 governors on December 9.”
Of those 15 governors, 11 have signed letters allowing refugees. While Texas, South Carolina, Florida and Georgia have not yet made a decision, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is reportedly close, Jeremy Redmon and Greg Bluestein write for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Last fiscal year, 1,189 refugees were resettled in Georgia, up from 837 the year before. The largest numbers last year came from Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar, Eritrea and Ukraine.”
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PUBLIC CHARGE – Yesterday the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan maintained the sole nationwide injunction blocking the implementation of the Trump administration’s “public charge” rule, writes Camilo Montoya-Galvez in CBS News. “In recent weeks, circuit courts lifted three of the four nationwide injunctions against the public charge rule, leaving only the order by a judge in New York.”
GUATEMALA UPDATE – Outgoing Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales says reports that Guatemala would begin accepting Mexican deportees from the U.S. are “completely untrue,” reports Jeff Abbott in Reuters. “The United States has talked about the possibility of including Mexican nationals, but that will have to be discussed with the next government,” said Morales.
ARKANSAS – A couple of days before Christmas, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) agreed to continue allowing refugee resettlement in the state — but one of the state’s two resettlement programs hasn’t received any refugees since 2015, reports Aprille Hanson in the Arkansas Catholic. And while resettlement workers like Jennifer Verkamp-Ruthven, interim director of Catholic Charities Refugee Resettlement Office in Springdale, are “very, very appreciative” of the governor’s decision, “the U.S. cap on refugees limits their ability to make even a dent in the overall refugee crisis. ‘It’s a drop in the bucket … We’re not the saviors in this one; people like to think that we are.’”
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