American Immigration Council — This Week in Immigration

American Immigration Council — This Week in Immigration
Your weekly summary from the Council.
 LATEST ANALYSIS 

Communities Continue to Stand by Immigrants Amidst Fear, Heightened Enforcement The first few weeks of President Trump’s second term in office have instilled a heightened level of fear, as longtime neighbors, residents, and tightly knit communities have encountered increased federal immigration enforcement. Nevertheless, many communities continue to show up for one another in big ways and small to defend their neighbors, their loved ones, and their homes.  

The Chilling Effect of Trump’s Indiscriminate Immigration Arrests & Propaganda

As we near the one-month mark of the new Trump administration, it is clear that the president’s thinly veiled threats of imposing mass deportation on “criminal immigrants” are in fact a promise to target all immigrants—and sometimes even U.S. citizens.  

FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) commonly transfers people in detention from one facility to another in a different geographic area. These transfers often remove people from loved ones and support systems and can disrupt individuals’ removal proceedings by taking them to places where access to legal representation is virtually impossible. ICE regularly moves people multiple times before their eventual release.  In 2012, ICE published a policy that consolidated guidance on transfers. The policy sought to establish protocols for making transfer decisions, systematize supervisory review of the determinations, and establish obligations for data keeping to ensure compliance. However, ICE has not published any updates to this policy in more than 13 years.   To get more information about this issue, the American Immigration Council teamed up with the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network to pursue more information about ICE detention transfers. 

Read more: FOIA Seeking Information about Detrimental Transfers of People in ICE Custody  
ACROSS THE NATION In December 2018, the Trump administration announced the creation of a new program called the “Migrant Protection Protocols”—often referred to as the “Remain in Mexico” program. The program, which was used to send approximately 68,000 migrants back to Mexico, suffered from widespread problems, including reports of severe human rights violations; high costs; an increase in repeat border crossings; and serious logistical problems. The Biden administration went on to suspend and then terminate MPP.   
 
After President Trump took office again in January, the Department of Homeland Security announced that MPP would once again be put into effect. The administration has yet to announce further details of the reinstated program.   
This recently updated fact sheet from the American Immigration Council discusses how MPP was put into effect under Trump during his first term, providing a window into how it may be utilized in the future.   

Read more: The “Migrant Protection Protocols:” An Explanation of the Remain in Mexico Program 

QUOTE OF THE WEEK “When ICE engages in intimidation stunts, like flashy social media updates, publicizing quotas and raids, or using military planes to deport people, the fearmongering might look like theater, but it actually hurts all American communities and local economies because people stay home from work and school.” – Nayna Gupta, Policy Director at the American Immigration Council 

FURTHER READING Axios: Trump’s mass deportation plan hits its own wall  Forbes: How Donald Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Threatens U.S. Food Supply  AP: Trump is signing up local law officers to help with immigration enforcement  Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: The immigrants may go. But the work won’t ABC News: Children, schools face renewed fears over heightened immigration enforcement   

MAKE A CONTRIBUTION 
Give $10
Give $50
Give $250
Give $25
Give $100
Other Amount

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *