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Archives for June 2020

Supreme Court limits First Amendment rights of US companies’ foreign affiliates

June 30, 2020 by PERM News

The US Supreme Court ruled 5-3 Monday that requiring foreign groups to have explicit policies opposing prostitution and sex trafficking in order to receive federal funds applies to US companies’ foreign affiliates because they do not possess First Amendment rights.

The case, Agency for International Development v. Alliance for Open Society International, Inc., raised the question of whether the federal government violated the First Amendment by prohibiting a US company’s foreign affiliate from receiving federal funding because it had not made an explicit policy statement.

The specific law at issue was the US Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Act of 2003, which required that American and foreign organizations have an explicit policy opposing prostitution and sex trafficking in order to receive federal funds.

In 2013, this stipulation, known as the Policy Requirement, was deemed an unconstitutional restraint on free speech when applied to American organizations. But whether it applied to a domestic company’s foreign affiliate was an open question until Monday.

In the opinion of the court, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote, “it is long settled as a matter of American constitutional law that foreign citizens outside U.S. territory do not possess rights under the U.S. Constitution,” and “it is long settled as a matter of American corporate law that separately incorporated organizations are separate legal units with distinct legal rights and obligations.” Together, these “two bedrock principles of American constitutional law and American corporate law … lead to a simple conclusion: As foreign organizations operating abroad, plaintiffs’ foreign affiliates possess no rights under the First Amendment.”

In rejecting the second claim, the court stated that this view is incorrect and that the 2013 decision was limited to American organizations.

Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch joined Kavanaugh’s opinion.

Thomas filed a concurring opinion to state that he disagrees with the 2013 decision. In his concurrence, he wrote “[t]he First Amendment does not mandate a viewpoint-neutral government,” so the government may condition funds on an affirmation that each organization can accept or reject.

Justice Stephen Breyer wrote the dissent, which Justices Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Sonia Sotomayor joined. In his dissent, Breyer said that the question at hand is not about foreign entities, but rather US-based entities and their protection under the First Amendment. Breyer’s dissent states that the corporate structure plays little role in an American company’s First Amendment protection. “[O]ur First Amendment precedents leave no doubt that corporate formalities have little to say about the issue now before us. We have made clear again and again (and again) that speech may be attributed across the corporate lines in the First Amendment context⁠—including in our previous opinion in this very case.” In concluding, Breyer wrote,

I fear the Court’s decision will seriously impede the countless American speakers who communicate overseas in a similar way. That weakens the marketplace of ideas at a time when the value of that marketplace for Americans, and for others, reaches well beyond our shores.

Justice Elena Kagan did not take part in the consideration or decision of the case.

The post Supreme Court limits First Amendment rights of US companies’ foreign affiliates appeared first on JURIST – News – Legal News & Commentary.

Source: Supreme Court limits First Amendment rights of US companies’ foreign affiliates

Filed Under: PERM-Ads.Com

COVID-Related Consular Closures Affect Many

June 29, 2020 by PERM News

The  U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq is among the many COVID-related closures of U.S. consulates that have stranded immigrants around the globe.

As this pandemic keeps borders shut, closed consulates are the biggest barrier for many, couples are separated, H-1B workers and students remain stuck outside the U.S. as coronavirus shutdown extends into the fourth month.

When Natasha Bhat rushed to India after her father-in-law died in late February, she didn’t think that returning to her residence in Fremont, California would be a problem. But when she tried to get her H-1B visa stamped at the U.S. Consulate in Kolkata India, they were closed.

Ms. Bhat, who works in human sources at a tech startup, had quickly packed just one small bag and left with her husband and 4-year-old son.

Her husband, also an H-1B visa holder, was in a position to have his visa stamped March 13 to return. However Ms. Bhat’s appointment a day later was canceled when the consulate shut down. They are just one of the many families affected by the closures.

The fact, people have been unable to schedule consular appointments since March — to get their visas stamped or to complete required interviews — are affecting “hundreds of thousands of people worldwide based on the average number of visas the State Department issued each month during the last fiscal year.”

Since late January, in response to the pandemic, the Trump administration has enacted a patchwork system of journey and immigration restrictions barring foreigners from some international locations—China, Brazil, and most of Europe—from getting into, in addition to some household of U.S. residents seeking to immigrate.

This week, President Trump barred a number of hundred thousand folks on a slate of pending employment-based visas from immigrating by way of the top of the 12 months.

The WSJ does a good job of explaining that these hurdles are a direct result of COVID-related precautions on the part of the U.S. State Department. Thus, this is a problem that has been brewing since the start of the nation’s response to the outbreak in mid-March.

As such, the problems PRE-date by months the President’s new efforts to pause employment-based migration.

The article notes that for one international student, delays in processing may delay educational opportunities in the fall. If his experience is being replicated around the globe, it’s entirely possible we’re going to see our first dip in international student enrollment in many years.

In observe, nevertheless, practically every foreigner wishing to journey to the U.S. faces an easy however impassable hurdle: Most American embassies and consulates stay closed. Whereas an exact determine is tough to estimate, a whole bunch of hundreds of individuals worldwide could also be caught since March as a result of they will get their visas stamped or attend the required interviews to have visas issued, primarily based on the typical variety of visas the State Division issued every month over the last fiscal 12 months.

The pause in regular visa processing, which has been in impact since mid-March, means couples, engaged or married, can’t reunite, the staff is being removed from their jobs or members of the family, and worldwide college students are worried as the autumn semester approaches.

As of now, many can’t schedule an interview at the American embassy till at the least mid-September.

 

Source: COVID-Related Consular Closures Affect Many

 

Filed Under: PERM-Ads.Com

Court rules that US government must release migrant children held during COVID-19

June 28, 2020 by PERM News

US District Court Judge Dolly Gee ruled on Friday that the federal government cannot keep migrant children detained during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In its minutes, the court stated that while it “appreciates both ICE’s and ORR’s efforts to reduce the number of Class Members in their custody during the pandemic,” the plaintiffs challenging the ongoing custody of migrants “identified issues, mistakes, or omissions in both the ORR and ICE Juvenile Coordinators’ reports.”

The court ordered that, by July 17, ICE must release minors to available sponsors or with their guardians “with all deliberate speed” while also maintaining protocols such as social distancing, masking, and enhanced testing within detention areas.

As of June 8, there were 124 children in ICE custody, according to the ruling. The ruling, applies to children who have resided at the three facilities for more than 20 days.

As of Friday afternoon, there were around 8,858 detainees in ICE custody who have been tested for coronavirus, 751 of those tested were possitive, according to the agency’s statistics.

Amy Maldonado, an attorney who works with detained families, said Gee “clearly recognized that the government is not willing to protect the health and safety of the children, which is their obligation.”

“They need to make the sensible choice and release the parents to care for their children,” she said of the government.

ICE denied instituting a binary choice or separating any parents from their children “pursuant to ‘binary choice.'”

In a letter directed to acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf and acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Matt Albence, it read,

“The Administration must stop using this public health crisis as a means for implementing unlawful and inhumane immigration policies. In these extraordinary times, human suffering need not be compounded by locking up families or instilling fear in the hearts of migrant parents,”

 

Trump Told Mexico to Stop Migrants From Reaching the U.S. So Far, His Plan Is Working

Released just before the pandemic on Jan 28, 2020 by New York Times

 

 

 

Source: Court rules that US government must release migrant children held during COVID-19

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TRUMP MISAPPROPRIATED MONEY TO BUILD WALL

June 27, 2020 by PERM News

Three days after President Trump took his re-election campaign to a construction site of his border wall in Arizona, a federal appeals court ruled Friday that he had defied Congress’ constitutional authority over federal spending by redirecting $2.5 billion in military funds to build 130 miles of barriers in California, Arizona, and New Mexico.

Congress appropriated the funds for military pay, weapons and other Defense Department purposes, and never authorized Trump to spend them on wall construction, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said in a pair of 2-1 rulings.

Funding for the wall had been denied by Congress,” and the Trump administration “lacked independent constitutional authority to authorize the transfer of funds,” said Chief Judge Sidney Thomas, joined by Judge Kim Wardlaw. Both were appointed by President Bill Clinton.

Judge Daniel Collins, a Trump appointee, dissented from both decisions. He said the military funds were legally transferred and also that the plaintiffs — California and 15 other states, the Sierra Club, and an advocacy group for border communities — had no right to sue over the alleged violation of congressional spending powers.

Although the appeals court upheld a federal judge’s injunction against the construction of the wall segments, the ruling did not halt construction. The Supreme Court voted 5-4 last July to allow the work to continue while the case proceeded. Its brief unsigned decision said the administration “has made a sufficient showing at this stage that the plaintiffs have no cause of action” — that is, that they had not shown direct harm from the construction that would entitle them to challenge it in court.

The appeals court majority reached a different conclusion, citing the plaintiffs’ claims that the wall was harming the environment and wildlife at the border and the states’ ability to enforce their own environmental laws. Similar issues are pending before the same panel in a case over $3.6 billion for additional wall segments, and the dispute could soon return to the high court.

“There’s no undoing the damage that’s been done, but we will be back before the Supreme Court to finally put a stop to this destructive wall,” said Dror Ladin, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer representing the Sierra Club and the Southern Border Communities Coalition. He said Trump’s “xenophobic wall is already leveling protected lands, desecrating cultural sites and destroying wildlife.”

The appeals court “reminded the president — once again — that no one is above the law,” said California Attorney General Xavier Becerra.

The Trump administration’s Justice Department declined to comment on the ruling.

After Congress refused to approve funds for the wall in 2018, Trump shut down many government operations for a record 35 days. When lawmakers then approved only $1.375 billion for limited barrier construction, the president declared a state of emergency over illegal immigration and said he would fund the wall with $8.1 billion that was in the budget for other purposes.

Some of the $2.5 billion at issue in Friday’s case was taken from Defense Department funds under a law that allows the Pentagon to redirect spending for important “unforeseen military requirements.” Other funds came from congressional appropriations to stop drug smuggling.

But “the border wall was not an unforeseen military requirement,” Thomas said in the majority opinion. He also said the administration had not shown any evidence that a wall would reduce drug smuggling, citing Justice Department reports that smugglers most commonly bring drugs across the Southwest border in motor vehicles at U.S. ports of entry.

Both the states and private organizations whose members live at or travel to the border have a right to challenge the construction, Thomas said. For the Sierra Club, he said, the “unconstitutional transfer of funds” harmed their members’ “environmental, aesthetic, and recreational interests.”

In dissent, Collins said neither the states nor the private plaintiffs had any rights at stake in the funding dispute between Congress and the president. He also said Congress had assigned the military to support “counter-drug activities” of other agencies, and, in the Defense Department budget, had authorized the Pentagon to decide whether “unforeseen military requirements” justified funding for a “higher priority item.”

Transfers of funding for the wall “were thus based on ‘military requirements’ that were ‘unforeseen’” and never forbidden by Congress, Collins said.

 

Source: 👎THIEF-IN-CHIEF: TRUMP MISAPPROPRIATED MONEY TO BUILD WASTEFUL WALL — Symbol of Hate, Stupidity Built With Stolen Funds, Says 9th Circuit!

Photo by Marco Zuppone on Unsplash

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Supreme Court rules asylum seekers cannot obtain review under federal habeas statute

June 26, 2020 by PERM News

The US Supreme Court ruled 7-2 Thursday in Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam that asylum seekers can be denied review of their immigration status under the federal habeas statute. This case came about when Vijayakumar Thuraissigiam was caught crossing the border into the US.

The court based its decision on two points: as applied here, 8 USC § 1252(e)(2) 1. does not violate the suspension clause; and 2. does not violate due process.

The suspension clause says that writ of habeas corpus protections will not be suspended unless “when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.” It exists with the same protection it did when the constitution was written, and the parties agree that there should not be an extension considered in this case. The court found that without an argument for extending habeas corpus there is no way it can be interpreted that when the constitution was written asylum seekers were considered by the writers.

The Supreme Court stated that;  “While aliens who have established connections in this country have due process rights in deportation proceedings, the Court long ago held that Congress is entitled to set the conditions for an alien’s lawful entry into this country and that, as a result, an alien at the threshold of initial entry cannot claim any greater rights under the Due Process Clause.”

Before, undocumented migrants could face quick deportation, without a federal court hearing, if they were detained within 14 days of entry and within 100 miles of the border. Thuraissigiam is not entitled to more due process than what the statute says because he came illegally and was apprehended 25 yards from the illegal access point. Now, the administration wants to apply that rule to people anywhere in the U.S. within two years of entering the country.

Lee Gelernt of the ACLU, who represented Thuraissigiam, said the ruling “fails to live up to the Constitution’s bedrock principle that individuals deprived of their liberty have their day in court, and this includes asylum seekers.” As a result, he said, “some people facing flawed deportation orders can be forcibly removed with no judicial oversight, putting their lives in grave danger.”

Justice Samuel Alito said “that form of relief is intended to be used for seeking release from detention, not as an avenue to get into federal court”.

How does the Trump administration’s victory affect people seeking asylum?

The Supreme Court ruling states that people seeking asylum in the U.S. can be deported without additional court hearings.

Source: Supreme Court rules asylum seekers cannot obtain review under federal habeas statute

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Trump Commemorates the 200th Mile of the U.S.-Mexico Border Wall in Arizona

June 25, 2020 by PERM News

 President Donald Trump commemorated the 200th mile of the U.S.-Mexico border wall in San Luis, Arizona, on Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Q Can I ask a question on the wall, How’s it looking?

Donald J. Trump replies: ”I think it’s great. It’s great. It’s going to be – it’s really foolproof. It’s solid steel. It’s rebar and concrete inside the steel. So we have a very heavy concrete inside the steel. And inside the concrete, we have rebar. So you have everything you could have. It’s what they wanted, and that’s what we did.”

Donald J. Trump: Any questions?

Q Mr. President, with all the problems that we’re facing right now, why are you determined to end DACA at this time – with unemployment, with COVID?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, we’re looking at it. We’ll work it out with DACA. I think good things are happening with DACA. They resubmit, but we’ll work it out. And the Democrats have been playing with DACA for years, and they haven’t done anything. I’ll get it done. I’ll get it done. And we’ll — good things will happen for DACA recipients, and pretty soon.

Q Is there a message for DREAMERS?

THE PRESIDENT: So, we’re going to — yeah. The message is: Put your chin up. Good things are going to happen. You’ll watch. Okay?

Q Why was the suspension on green cards necessary?

THE PRESIDENT: You have to talk up.

Q Suspension on green cards: Why was it necessary?

THE PRESIDENT: So we want to give jobs to Americans right now. Right now we want jobs going to Americans.

Any other questions? Okay. Thank you all very much.

END

“We’re going to build a wall” – it’s something we’ve heard Donald Trump say many times since he started presidency.

Despite the border wall becoming a controversial topic, President Trump continued to find ways to complete his project while nearing the end of his term.

What is the status of the wall?

The US-Mexico border is 1,954 miles (3,145km) long and crosses vast deserts and mountains in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. About 654 miles of that have some sort of manmade barriers, such as fencing or a wall. President Donald J Trump insists on building this wall while nobody really wants to help fund it. This day marked the 216 miles of the border wall, well shy of the 450 miles he has pledged to finish by the end of this 2020. A report Friday by Customs and Border Protection shows that since Trump took office in 2017, $15 billion has been budgeted for about 738 miles of wall.

How much does the wall really cost?

  • The original estimate of $5.7 billion dollars would build 234miles of the wall.
  • The new estimate is $24.4 million per mile
  • $24.4 million per mile does not include the large cost overruns for construction projects. That would bring the total cost to $36.6 million per mile.
  • The total estimate does not include the low-ball $870,000 annual cost to maintain the wall.

As the cost of the border wall keeps getting higher, the border wall keeps becoming less of a wall.

 

What exactly is “the wall” and why is the president so intent on getting the billions to fund it?

Supporters argue that:

“This is the most important issue facing our nation. Our border must be secured,” Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Prescott, said in a statement Monday. “Yuma is on the front lines of this defense and I am proud to have supported additional border security.”

  1. The Democrats are not willing to compromise on border security.
  2. The human cost of illegal immigration is devastating.
  3. Taxpayers shoulder the financial costs of illegal immigration.
  4. The experts want a border wall to help them fight illegal immigration.
  5. The border crisis is not going to solve itself.

 

Those who are against the wall say:

 

Obama on Trump Wall: ‘Good luck with that’

  1. A lot of undocumented immigrants are already here.
  2. Cartels can outsmart checkpoints.
  3. Terrorists aren’t undocumented.
  4. Immigration courts are already overwhelmed.

How does the Wall affect the environment?

  1. Disrupts wildlife refuges and parks
  2. Divides a river
  3. Exacerbates flooding
  4. Exempts from environmental oversight laws
  5. exposes danger to wildlife and plants
  6. Threatens diverse landscapes

More on effected endangered species here at National Geographic

 

How does Mexico feel about the Wall?

Here is part of the transcript of the call between Mr. Trump and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, which took place on January 27, 2017, and lasted 53 minutes.

Trump: Hello, good morning.

Pena Nieto: Mr. President, good morning.

Trump: How are you, Mr. President?

Pena Nieto: I am good. How are you? It is good to speak with you. Let me switch to Spanish so I will be more comfortable.

Trump: Yes, that would be fine, Enrique.

Pena Nieto: President Trump, I am very glad to hear from you and I know we have had a point of difference that has complicated the situation. Let me tell you clearly what I think is now happening in the route of reaching an agreement between our two nations. The first thing I want to say is that I highly appreciate the openness of your team and the willingness of your team to work to open a new framework between our two countries.

Trump: Thank you.

Pena Nieto: Yes, and I want to also thank you personally for what you said last Wednesday on the importance of Mexico to have a strong economy, and also the responsibility our administration has accepted to stop illegal trafficking of weapons and money coming into Mexico. However, we have found an issue here that marks differences and this is nothing new, Mr. President.

I think that since your visit we have spoken about this and this is what I want to talk about, this difference. Let me tell you, Mr. President, this is not a personal difference. It has nothing to do with you personally, Mr. President.

”But it is unthinkable that I cannot ignore this because we find this completely unacceptable for Mexicans to pay for the wall that you are thinking of building.”

You can read the full transcripts  originally released from the Washington Post here

Despite many who are against the wall, the Trump administration continues to pump money into the border wall, arrests of migrants have declined dramatically compared to 2019, and new restrictions related to the coronavirus continue to prevent migrants and asylum seekers from entering the U.S.

 

In May, Border Patrol arrested more than 21,475 people along the Southern border, according to the latest available data. Of those detained, 19,707 were expelled from the US under a public health order in March.

 

Sources:
New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Times of London, Lonely Planet Guides, Library of Congress, Compton’s Encyclopedia, The Guardian, National Geographic, Smithsonian magazine, The New Yorker, Time, Newsweek, Reuters, AP, AFP, Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic Monthly, The Economist, Global Viewpoint Christian Science Monitor, Foreign Policy, Wikipedia, BBC, CNN, NBC News, Fox News and various books and other publications.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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DHS Suggests Asylum Seekers Should Get Used to ‘Homelessness’ After Stripping Work Permits

June 25, 2020 by PERM News

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will finalize a new regulation on June 26 which will strip most asylum seekers of the right to seek work authorization. The rule imposes sweeping new grounds to deny asylum seekers a work permit during the multi-year process of obtaining asylum.

Source: DHS Suggests Asylum Seekers Should Get Used to ‘Homelessness’ After Stripping Work Permits

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DHS Changes Rules for Asylum Work Permit Applications

June 24, 2020 by PERM News

DHS issued a Final Rule on Monday modifying the regulation governing the time frames by which USCIS must adjudicate initial applications for employment authorization (colloquially known as work permits) filed by aliens seeking asylum, and by which aliens can request renewal of such “(c)(8) employment authorization”.

 

  • The Final Rule removes the 30-day deadline by which USCIS was required to adjudicate initial (c)(8) applications. That deadline was created in 1997, when the then-INS received 52,217 affirmative asylum applications. By FY 2017, in contrast, USCIS received 141,638 such applications.
  • In FY 2013, USCIS received 41,021 initial applications for (c)(8) employment authorization. By FY 2019, the number of initial receipts had jumped to 216,038.
  • Although USCIS does not charge a fee for those initial (c)(8) applications, and despite the massive increase in such applications, in FY 2017 a federal district-court judge issued an injunction requiring USCIS to adjudicate those applications within the 30-day regulatory deadline.
  • The elimination of the 30-day deadline will discourage aliens from filing frivolous asylum applications after entering the United States illegally or overstaying their temporary nonimmigrant admissions in the hopes of living and working here indefinitely. It would also relieve USCIS from having to rubber-stamp (c)(8) applications.
  • The Final Rule also eliminates a requirement that aliens with (c)(8) authorization file for renewal within 90 days of the date of expiration, in line with earlier regulatory amendments.
  • On Friday, DHS will publish a separate Final Rule containing additional regulations relating to the issuance of a (c)(8) employment authorization, that will extend the wait time before an asylum applicant can apply for employment authorization from 150 days to 365 calendar days.

Full Story at: https://cis.org/Arthur/DHS-Changes-Rules-Asylum-Work-Permit-Applications

 

Source: DHS Changes Rules for Asylum Work Permit Applications

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The Trump Administration Expands Legal Immigration Ban, Using COVID-19 Pandemic as Excuse

June 24, 2020 by PERM News

The Trump administration has banned foreign nationals on certain employment-based nonimmigrant visas from entering the United States. The new ban begins June 24, at 12:01 am ET. The administration also extended its April 23 ban on the entry of certain immigrants, which would have expired on June 22.

Source: The Trump Administration Expands Legal Immigration Ban, Using COVID-19 Pandemic as Excuse

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2017-2020 Immigration Timeline

June 23, 2020 by PERM News

2017-2020 Immigration Timeline of major Immigration events following The presidency of Donald Trump which began at noon EST (17:00 UTC) on January 20, 2017.

 

January 25, 2017: January 25, 2017: Trump issues executive orders on sanctuary cities and border wall

January 27, 2017: Trump issues executive order on refugee admission and immigration bans

February 2017: ICE conducts operations targeting criminals

February 20, 2017: DHS issues guidance on enforcement of immigration laws.PDF

March 6, 2017: Trump issues executive order temporarily suspending immigration from six countries

March 20, 2017: DHS issues first detainer report

April 18, 2017: Trump issues Buy American, Hire American executive order

May 18, 2017: ICE 2017 immigration-related arrests up nearly 38 percent over 2016 arrests.PDF

June 15, 2017: Trump administration rescinds Deferred Action for Parents of Americans (DAPA) policy

July 11, 2017: DHS delays implementation of International Entrepreneur Rule

July 25, 2017: New Byrne criminal justice grant requirements for cities and states

August 2, 2017: Reforming American Immigration for a Strong Economy Act

September 18, 2017: U.S. State Department outlines new requirements for visa holders

September 24, 2017: Trump administration releases updated travel restrictions

September 27, 2017: Trump administration limits the number of refugees to be admitted to the U.S. to 45,000

October 24, 2017: Restrictions on refugee admissions expire; new guidelines in place

November 1, 2017: November 1, 2017: Trump calls on Congress to end Diversity Lottery after a terrorist attack

November 20, 2017: DHS announces end date for a program allowing Haitians to live and work in the U.S.

December 11, 2017: Trump calls for an end to chain migration after the terror attack

January 5, 2018: Trump administration sends a list of immigration priorities to lawmakers

January 8, 2018: DHS announces end date for a program allowing El Salvadorans to live and work in the U.S.

January 9, 2018: Judge rules that Trump administration must keep renewing DACA permits

January 16, 2018: U.S. Department of Justice appeals DACA ruling

January 24, 2018: Trump says he supports a pathway to citizenship for DACA recipients

January 25, 2018: Trump administration releases initial framework for an immigration plan

February 15, 2018: Senate rejects four immigration reform proposals

February 26, 2018: SCOTUS denies Trump administration’s request to review DACA case

February 27, 2018: Federal judge rules administration did not improperly waive regulations for wall construction

March 6, 2018: DOJ files lawsuit against California’s immigration laws

March 13, 2018: Trump visits border wall prototypes in California

March 20, 2018: Trump claims sanctuary cities harbor criminals

March 28, 2018: Trump shares photos of construction on U.S.-Mexico border

April 2, 2018: Justice Department announces quotas for immigration judges

April 4, 2018: Trump signs memorandum to deploy troops to U.S.-Mexico border

April 24, 2018: Judge rules Trump administration must continue accepting new DACA applications

May 1, 2018: Texas and six other states file lawsuit to end DACA

May 7, 2018: Trump administration announces it will prosecute parents who cross the border with their children

June 11, 2018: Sessions says individuals who are victims of private crime not eligible for asylum

October 26, 2018: Trump administration to send troops to U.S.-Mexico border

October 30, 2018: Trump proposes ending birthright citizenship

November 8, 2018: Ninth Circuit Court rules Trump administration cannot end DACA

November 9, 2018: Trump issues a presidential proclamation on asylum

December 20, 2018: DHS announces some migrants will be sent back to Mexico to await immigration proceedings

December 21, 2018: Trump pledges government shutdown unless border wall funding secured

January 8, 2019: Trump makes case for border barrier in televised address; Democratic leadership rejects request

January 19, 2019: Trump releases plan to secure the border and end partial shutdown

February 3, 2019: Trump administration announces more troops headed to the southern border

February 15, 2019: Trump signs bill to fund parts of the government and border barrier; declares state of emergency

February 21, 2020: SCOTUS allows public charge rule to take effect

June 18, 2020: SCOTUS rules DHS did not properly follow APA when seeking to end DACA.pdf

 

 

Photo by The New York Public Library on Unsplash

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