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Border restrictions remain in effect since COVID

2022.12.28 00:26

 




Border restrictions remain in effect since COVID

Budrigannews.com – On Tuesday, the Supreme Court of the United States kept in place a pandemic-era policy that allowed officials to quickly expel migrants caught at the border between the United States and Mexico.

The court granted Republican state attorneys general’s request to delay a judge’s invalidation of the emergency public health order known as Title 42 by a vote of 5-4.

The 19 states argue that changing the policy could increase the already-record number of border crossings and put a strain on the resources of the states where migrants end up. The court said it would hear contentions on whether the states could mediate to shield Title 42 in its February meeting.

A decision is normal toward June’s end.

According to President Joe Biden, the United States government will be required to enforce the order until the issue is resolved.

He stated, “But I think it’s overdue.”

On December 19, Chief Justice John Roberts, a conservative member of the court’s 6-3 majority, issued a temporary administrative stay to keep Title 42 in effect while the court considered whether to extend the policy. It had been scheduled to expire on December 21 prior to his order.

In their dissent, liberal justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, along with conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch, referred to Tuesday’s order as “unwise.”

He asked why the court was hurrying to hear a dispute about “emergency decrees that have outlived their shelf life,” and the only reason he could think of was that the states thought Title 42 would help prevent an “immigration crisis.”

In an opinion to which Jackson also contributed, Gorsuch wrote, “But the current border crisis is not a COVID crisis.” Additionally, courts should not be in the business of enforcing administrative edicts created for a single emergency due to elected officials’ failure to address a different emergency.”

Mexico’s unfamiliar service had no quick remark on the court’s choice.

The International Rescue Committee said in a statement that Title 42 had been used to justify nearly 2.5 million expulsions since March 2020. They argued that U.S. border policies had put a lot of strain on the region, making migration routes more dangerous.

When the COVID-19 pandemic began in March 2020, Republican former President Donald Trump implemented Title 42 for the first time.

After U.S. health officials stated in April that it was no longer required to prevent the spread of COVID-19, the Democratic Biden administration attempted to lift it. However, in response to a legal challenge led by Republicans, the repeal was stopped by a federal judge in Louisiana who was appointed by Trump.

Tijuana’s director of migration affairs, Enrique Lucero, noted that the city had a significant backlog of U.S. asylum seekers and called it “absurd” that Title 42 remained in place.

He stated, “This measure has to go away sooner or later.”

Miguel Colmenares, a Venezuelan transient in the Mexican boundary city of Tijuana, said on knowing about the court’s choice that he didn’t have the foggiest idea what he would do.

The 27-year-old stated, “I have no money, and my family is waiting for me.”

“The fact that we must continue to wait breaks my heart.”

The American Civil Liberties Union represented a group of asylum-seeking migrants who had sued the United States government over the policy, claiming that the expulsions to Mexico put them at risk of kidnapping or assault.

On November 15, U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan in Washington, D.C., ruled that Title 42 was illegal and sided with the migrants.

The government failed to demonstrate that the risk of migrants spreading COVID-19 was “a real problem,” according to Sullivan, an appointee of Democratic former President Bill Clinton. He also said that it didn’t take into account the harm that Title 42 would do to asylum seekers.

The Biden administration sought time to prepare for the policy’s end, when migrants would be able to request asylum at the border in the same manner as before the pandemic. It had until December 21 from Sullivan.

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A group of Republican state attorneys general sought to intervene after being dissatisfied with the lower court’s decision to continue defending the policy in court. They took the matter to the Supreme Court after a federal appeals court on December 16 refused to let them intervene and put Sullivan’s order on hold.

“It’s frustrating the Biden organization will forfeit the wellbeing of American families for political purposes,” said Conservative Arizona Principal legal officer Imprint Brnovich, who is driving the protection of Title 42.

Border restrictions remain in effect since COVID

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