- Bill aims to shut border to most migrants, speed deportations
- Crackdown would be accompanied by boost to legal immigration
The bipartisan Senate border deal announced Sunday night would crack down on illegal border crossings, make it harder to apply for asylum and speed up deportations of undocumented migrants but also open up more visas for legal immigration.
The compromise addresses Republican demands for new restrictions on migration but already has provoked vehement opposition from
Immigration is moving to the forefront of voter concerns as the number of undocumented migrants crossing the US-Mexico border surges, repeatedly setting new monthly records under President
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Some conservative Republicans and media outlets promoted caricatured versions of the emerging pieces of the compromise as it was being assembled. Negotiators in turn hotly disputed those assertions. Here is what the border deal would do.
Emergency Border Shutdown
Biden would have to immediately close much of the border to asylum-seekers and other migrants using sweeping new emergency authority. US border officials would turn away migrants who try to cross between official ports of entry, except unaccompanied children and people fleeing torture. It would still provide a channel for a limited number of asylum claims for migrants who arrive at official entry points.
The president would be required lock down the border whenever average daily migrant arrivals hit 5,000 for a week or 8,500 on a single day. He would have the option to do so whenever the daily average hits 4,000 for a week.
The border would have effectively been shut down if the bill had been in place during the surge in recent months, per top negotiator Senator
US citizens, permanent residents and foreigners with legitimate visas still would be allowed to come into the country at official border entry points even during such an emergency shutdown. Freight traffic also would still be allowed. The shutdown is similar to Title 42 authority used by both Biden and Trump during the pandemic public health emergency, but would carry a stricter penalty for anyone who tries repeat crossings — a one-year ban on seeking legal entry.
Some conservative critics suggested previously the trigger provisions would establish a new loophole welcoming up to 5,000 undocumented migrants into the country each day. In fact, undocumented migrants would remain subject to current enforcement measures, as well as new restrictions imposed in the bill.
Expedited Asylum Processing
Migrants not subject to fast-tracked deportation and detention processes would enter a new asylum screening process and be released under government supervision while they make their case. They would get work permits and a decision on their claims within months.
Those whose cases fail would be swiftly deported.
“We end catch and release,” Sinema said.
The idea, Sinema and Republican Senator
Limiting Asylum
Migrants would have to show more evidence to establish they have a “reasonable possibility” of qualifying for protection in the US before they can pursue a case. The standard for a final determination wouldn’t change, just the initial screening threshold. Currently any applicant who shows they have a credible fear of persecution in their home country can pursue a case in US immigration courts, which are clogged with a 3-million-case backlog. That backlog effectively lets migrants stay in the US sometimes for a decade or more while their cases are pending.
Billions for Enforcement
Negotiators agreed to more than $20 billion in border security and immigration provisions, including hiring new asylum officers and expanding detention capacity.
“It’s not cheap,” said Democratic Senator
Current Authority
Speaker
Federal judges struck down then-President Trump’s attempt to block asylum claims from any migrant who crossed the border between official ports of entry. Lankford said the new authorities and funding require Congress to act.
More Legal Immigration
The bill would also add a combined 50,000 work and family visas a year for the next five years, and protect legal foreign workers’ children from aging out of legal status.
It would also provide a long-sought pathway to permanent residency for Afghan evacuees who fled their country after the US withdrawal there. The bill does not, however, provide a path to citizenship for unauthorized immigrants in the US, a provision long sought by Democrats.
Election-Year Politics
Soaring border crossings have stirred Republican fury and Democratic anxiety as even northern cities struggle to manage migrant arrivals. Six in 10 swing-state voters say Biden bears responsibility,
Republican lawmakers argue that the administration has effectively encouraged migration by renouncing Trump-era border restrictions. House Republicans are preparing to impeach Homeland Security Secretary
Some Democrats argue Trump and his allies would rather use chaos at the border as a campaign issue. Trump has said the compromise would be a “terrible mistake” and Republicans should only accept a “perfect” border deal.
Ukraine Plan B?
The border deal is supposed to unlock long-delayed military aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, and Senate Majority Leader
Senior Senate Republicans, including their leader
But either Johnson would need to bring the bill up for a House vote or a small number of Republicans could join with Democrats to force a vote through a rarely used parliamentary procedure.
(Updates with additional detail on Republican objections, handling of asylum claims at official entry points beginning with second paragraph)
--With assistance from
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