Archive for November, 2020

Liberals/Progressives Need To Fight As Hard As Conservatives Do – The Hudson Reporter

Dear Editor:

Im baffled by what I see and hear from liberal/progressive Democrats about this shameful conservative and Republican effort to steal the election from BidenNOTHING !!!!!Where are the protests about this shameful and immoral effort to steal the election?Where are the voices?I see and hear virtually nothing.Are we going to be mute for the next two months until they eventually steal it?I guess so.Too many Democrats strike me as being too timid and meek and spineless.They seem to be intimidated by the conservatives.At least the right-wingers fight hard for what they believe in and want.I often get the feeling that Democrats think that if we make nice to those bullying, ranting, right-wing blowhards that that will somehow work. It will not.We need to speak up and fight harder for the humane values which we believe in and stand for.It is about time that we faced-down our political adversaries.

Stewart B Epstein

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Liberals/Progressives Need To Fight As Hard As Conservatives Do - The Hudson Reporter

Reader letters, Thursday: Senate runoffs give chance to stand against liberals – Savannah Morning News

ThursdayNov19,2020at6:16AM

Senate runoffs give chance to stand against liberals

If the two U.S. Senate seats up for grabs in January should swing to the left, how might a Democratic Senate overturn conservative gains on the Supreme Court? Would this allow the Democrats to "pack the court" in order to force its rulings to uphold the most despicable liberal agendas?

Evangelical Christians and conservatives generally are anchored in their belief that this country is moving in the wrong direction morally and ethically. We have been encouraged by having three recent Supreme Court vacancies filled by conservative, originalist judges who are committed to Interpreting the rule of law as originally intended our Constitutions framers. By their writings, these men clearly accepted that there are moral absolutes upon which our laws, and our behavior, both institutionally and individually, should be directed.

I believe President-elect Joe Biden will attempt to be moderate and reunite us for the common good. But there must be a balance of power to ensure that more progressive Democrats dont lead us off into a morass of "situational ethics, with every man "doing what is right in his own eyes rather than taking into account its impact on love thy neighbor as thyself.

John Sullivan, Savannah

Time to move on from GOP leaders

America has spoken. The majority of people in this democratic society have repudiated Donald J. Trump, his policies and his personality. Georgias two Republican senators have been loud and proud in their support, allegiance and defense of this man.

Now that this wanna-be king has been shown the exit door, why should we keep his court jesters?

Bennie D. Spaulding, Savannah

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Reader letters, Thursday: Senate runoffs give chance to stand against liberals - Savannah Morning News

Liberals Respond To Throne Speech – country94.ca

Interim Liberal leader Roger Melanson delivers his response to the throne speech on Nov. 19, 2020. (Image: New Brunswick Legislature video capture)

New Brunswicks Official Opposition has delivered its response to the throne speech released Tuesday.

Liberal leader Roger Melanson touched on several topics during his hour-long address in the legislature Thursday morning.

But much of his speech focused on the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on the province and New Brunswickers.

Melanson said this years throne speech is critically important because the governments action will have an impact not only on the coming months but also on years ahead.

The clock is ticking and never has the burden of responsibility been so heavy, said Melanson. There is no time for hesitation and no time for errors. More than ever action is needed, and more than ever government will be held accountable.

Melanson said the Higgs government needs to do more to help businesses get through COVID-19.

He noted that New Brunswick is ranked last in the country in its financial response to the pandemic.

The current government takes a short-term accounting approach and seems to be betting that businesses will overcome this crisis on their own, said Melanson.

Lets be realistic. At this rate, several of them will go out of business or have already gone out of business. CFIB is projecting that it could be up to 15 per cent.

Melanson said we will need appropriate levels of revenue to operate our hospitals, nursing homes, long-term care homes and schools after the pandemic.

But we will not have that, he said, without a strong economy and profitable businesses.

Its easier to support an existing business than supporting a starting business, said Melanson. Government must step up before its too late.

Melanson said we also need action not promises to address affordable housing issues in the province.

He urged the Higgs government to make investments in partnership with the federal and municipal governments.

Melanson also reiterated his partys promise to bring forward rent control legislation in the coming weeks.

We hope that all members of this house will unanimously support this bill, he said to applause from members of his party. This is not about party politics. This is about New Brunswickers. This is about people in need.

Melanson applauded the government for extending Ottawas early learning and child care agreement for another year.

He encouraged the government to stay the course beyond the next 12 months.

The Liberals also accused the Higgs government, once again, of having a secret agenda when it comes to health reform.

Melanson said community consultations the Progressive Conservatives have promised are fake.

Following the last provincial election, the premier was not given a mandate to initiate turbulence, he said. The current crisis must not be used as a pretext for the disengagement of government.

Melanson said it is great that the Higgs government plans to establish nurse practitioner clinics, but noted it has been mentioned in throne speeches since 2018.

He said the Tories have also been promising to reduce wait times for knee and hip replacements since 2018.

On the topic of Clinic 554, Melanson said his party strongly believes the government should repeal legislation which prevents payment for abortion services outside of hospitals.

The Liberal leader also addressed calls for an inquiry into systemic racism in the province. He said when most of the population is calling for an inquiry, the premier has a duty to listen.

What matters here, Mr. Speaker, is not the premiers personal opinion, said Melanson. What matters are the demands of First Nation leaders.

Green Party leader David Coon is expected to deliver his reply to the throne speech Friday.

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Liberals Respond To Throne Speech - country94.ca

Biden Has Promised to Undo Trump’s Immigration Policies. How Much Is He Really Likely to Reform? – TIME

President Donald Trump ran his first presidential campaign on the promise to overhaul U.S. immigration, and for the most part, he kept that promise. Month after month, from the very start of Trumps term, immigration policy changed rapidly, from the Zero Tolerance policy that separated children from their parents, to record low caps on the number of refugees accepted by the U.S. each year.

President-elect Joe Biden has promised to undo most if not all of President Trumps immigration reforms. Hes pledged, for instance, to immediately end the ban restricting foreigners from several Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S. and reinstate protections from deportation for the roughly 650,000 people who arrived in the U.S. illegally as minors, known as Dreamers.

But after four years of sweeping changes, making some changes could prove more complicated, and could come through executive orders, presidential proclamations or possibly get stuck in a divided Congress, experts say. For instance, the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), otherwise known as Remain in Mexico, which has kept an estimated more than 67,000 asylum seekers in Mexico while their cases are adjudicated in the U.S., could prove difficult to reverse if the Biden Administration hopes to avoid a surge in migration to the southern border.

And while Bidens campaign website promises to modernize Americas immigration system, immigration advocates and attorneys point out that the Obama-Biden Administration oversaw millions of deportations and an expansion of family detention, raising concerns about what the next four years will bring. Spokespeople from the Biden transition team and the Biden Campaign did not return TIMEs request for comment.

The Trump Administration made immigration its signature issue, says Tom Wong, an assistant professor of political science at the University of California San Diego. What well see from a Biden Administration within the first 100 days are those things that can be undone with the stroke of a pen [Immigration] advocates need to be clear-eyed that a Biden Administration does not automatically bring about comprehensive immigration reform.

Here is what Biden is promising, and what hell likely be able to deliver during his term.

Among the changes Biden has promised to make during the first 100 days of his Administration is reinstating Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), an Obama-era executive action that Trump rescinded in 2017 which provides protection from deportation for an estimated 650,000 people who arrived in the U.S. illegally as children.

An estimated 56,000 people who have become eligible since Trump ended DACA would be able to submit applications if Biden reinstated the program, according to the Migration Policy Institute (MPI), a nonpartisan research organization. Biden has also promised to ensure that Dreamers are eligible for federal student aid, making higher education more accessible to those with limited financial options.

But without comprehensive immigration reform, which could overhaul and modernize the U.S. immigration system and create a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, this population will continue to live in uncertainty about their future in the U.S. Though Biden has laid out a lengthy ambitious plan for immigration, a divided Congress could mean barriers to policy changes like comprehensive immigration reform, which includes, among other things, a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S., including Dreamers.

Biden has also promised to rescind the so-called Muslim ban on his first day in office, putting an end to travel bans from 13 countries, many of which are home to Muslim-majority populations. Wong says ending the travel ban would not only be a change to U.S. policy, but would symbolize a change in the nations immigration priorities. The Muslim ban was one of the first executive actions that the Trump Administration took that really made clear its stated preferences not just to limit immigration, but to limit certain kinds of immigration, he says. It wasnt just about reducing overall numbers, it was about gaming the immigration system to allow a certain privileged few to enter, while excluding others.

Biden has also promised that on the first day of his presidency, he will appoint a task force to track down the parents of 545 children who have still not been found three years after Trumps Zero Tolerance Policy was enacted. (According NBC News, the number of children could be as high as 666). The task force may have their work cut out for them, as the Trump Administration never kept comprehensive contact information for the parents whose children were separated from them. For that reason, advocates and attorneys tell TIME, we may never actually know the total number of children who were separated from their parents under the policy.

The current estimate is that more than 5,500 were separated during Trumps Zero Tolerance policy, and during a pilot program in El Paso, Texas, before the policy was implemented. Additional children were separated after a June 2018 executive order ending the practice. Many of the parents for these children have been located, either in the U.S. or abroad, and have been reunited, but for the 545 children whose parents have yet to be located, it is unclear whether they have been reunited.

While experts acknowledge the challenge facing the task force, they welcome the effort. We certainly think that its a good idea to create a task force, says Christie Turner-Herbas, Director of Special Programs at Kids in Need of Defense (KIND), a nonprofit aiding in the the family reunification process. We still feel like we havent gotten full and complete records from every different kind of government agency that might have information about the parents or the children, or other contact information Something like a task force could really assist with that effort.

Read more: The U.S. Separated Families Decades Ago, Too. With 545 Migrant Children Missing Their Parents, That Moment Holds a Key Lesson

Another immediate reversal Biden plans to make is in relation Trumps controversial border wall, which he promised during his 2016 campaign would be paid for by Mexico. That didnt happen, but in February 2019, Trump declared a national emergency, allowing his administration to redirect Department of Defense money into the walls construction. About 400 miles of border wall went up in California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas during the Trump Administration, which includes repairs to already existing barriers.

There will not be another foot of wall constructed in my Administration, Biden told NPRs Lulu Garcia-Navarro during an August roundtable with the National Association of Hispanic Journalists.

Biden has promised end the national emergency declaration, immediately ending wall construction and cutting the funding, but has said he would not knock down the wall that was constructed during the Trump Administration

Despite Bidens promises to end Trumps detrimental asylum policies, experts say undoing Trumps unprecedented asylum restrictions will be a balancing act. There are some steps the Biden Administration could take, for example, to end Trumps metering policy, that limits the amount of people who can make an initial claim for asylum per day. Biden could also end Trumps expulsions that have taken place since March 2020 as COVID-19 has spread across the U.S. and most of the world.

Read more: Migrants Stranded in Mexico Have 1 Year to File for Asylum. COVID-19 Is Making That Deadline Nearly Impossible

DHSs expulsion rule allows U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to immediately remove anyone who crosses the border without authorization to their last country of transit without traditional processing or a chance to have their claims heard in court because of the risks posed by COVID-19. Since the rule was adopted in March, U.S. Border Patrol has conducted more than 197,000 expulsions, according to CBP data.

But the new Administration will likely be cautious about quickly ending the so-called Remain in Mexico program, which stipulates asylum seekers who claim asylum in the U.S. after entering from Mexico must wait in Mexico while their cases are heard, without first developing a plan to prevent a surge in migration at the U.S./Mexico border.

Read more: Theyre Screaming for Help. See Drawings From Children Stuck in Mexico as They Seek U.S. Asylum

Though Bidens campaign pledge has been to reassert Americas commitment to asylum-seekers and refugees, there is evidence that migration flows to the U.S. can follow changes in U.S. immigration policy, according to MPI. For example, after Trump took office, there were record low flows of migration to the U.S. at first as people waited to see what Trump would do.

If and when the future Biden Administration changes these restrictive [asylum] policies, it will have to do so with great care and planning and in a way that balances humanitarian concerns while avoiding a rush on the border that could overwhelm resources, and result in a renewed sense throughout the country that the border is out of control, Jessica Bolter, an associate policy analyst at MPI, said during a Nov. 9 webinar.

The Biden Administration may also have to rethink guidance to immigration judges on how to adjudicate asylum cases. In 2014, a judge found that a woman escaping a domestic violence situation did qualify for asylum, setting a new precedent that was later overturned by then Attorney General Jeff Sessions in 2018. Sessions also decided that fleeing gang violence was not grounds for asylum. Biden is likely to return to Obama-era guidance which allowed for both claims, according to MPI, but even under Obama, the odds of being granted asylum in the U.S. were low.

The U.S. was once considered the world leader on refugee protections, offering permanent resettlement to more people per year than any other country in the world combined, according to the American Immigration Council. The U.S. has been a leader in shaping resettlement programs since admitting more than one million refugees in the aftermath of World War Two. That ended abruptly during the Trump Administration, which lowered the cap on the number of refugees admitted into the U.S. each year. In October, The White House announced it was setting the fiscal year 2021 cap at 15,000 refugees, an all-time low.

Read more: I Oversaw DHS Refugee Affairs. Here Are 3 Ways the Trump Administration Is Trying to Mislead You

Biden has promised to increase the refugee admittance cap to 125,000 people a higher ceiling than during the Obama-Biden Administration and seek to raise it over time commensurate with our responsibility, our values, and the unprecedented global need, according to his campaign website. According to the UNHCR, at the end of 2019 there were an estimated 26 million refugees worldwide.

Offering hope and safe haven to refugees is part of who we are as a country, reads Bidens campaign promise. We cannot mobilize other countries to meet their humanitarian obligations if we are not ourselves upholding our cherished democratic values and firmly rejecting Trumps nativist rhetoric and actions.

The Obama-Biden Administration oversaw a record-breaking number of deportations, something immigration advocates and attorneys have stated is a concern for them as Biden prepares to take office. Already, some immigrant advocates and lawyers have criticized the Biden Administration for selecting Cecilia Muoz as a member of the transition team, and have expressed their hopes that she does not become selected as an overseer of immigration policy. Muoz, who was formally the head of the White House Domestic Policy Council during the Obama years, has been criticized for enabling the thousands of deportations that took place during those eight years.

According to Wong, who was also an advisor to the Obama White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and co-lead the immigration portfolio, the hardline on deportations and enforcement was a strategy calculation for the Obama Administration in order to garner Republican support for comprehensive immigration reform.

In the end, that strategy proved ineffective, Wong says, and instead led to 5.2 million people being deported from the U.S. (The Clinton Administration deported more than 12 million people, and the Bush Administration deported more than 10 million.)

Under Trump, enforcement of deportations expanded from Obamas guidance of prioritizing undocumented immigrants who have been convicted of a felony or were considered a threat to national security and public safety, among other criteria, to include all undocumented immigrants.

Biden will also have to decide what to do about the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. Though the agency has existed since 2003, it has faced widespread allegations of neglect and human rights violations under the Trump Administration. There are over 130 ICE facilities in the U.S., about 66 of which are run by private contractors, according to immigrant advocacy organization Freedom for Immigrants, which collects data on ICE facilities. A combination of Trumps family separation policy and the number of deaths that have occurred in ICE custodyat least seven children have diedhave fueled calls from immigration activists and some members of congress to shut ICE down.

Biden will also have to balance calls to Abolish ICE with what the Democratic party and voters want to see happen, Wong says.

Though Biden will likely not abolish ICE, he may take steps to end government partnerships with for-profit companies like GEO Group, CoreCivic and LaSalle Corrections which together run dozens of ICE facilities. He may also seek to shorten the length of time for those in detentionparticularly for childrenand improve the quality of health care provided at these facilities, a topic that recently came into the spotlight after a whistleblower accused a doctor at a privately run ICE facility of performing unwanted hysterectomies on detained women.

Read more: The Objective Is to Save Lives. Inside the Effort to Get ICE Detainees Released During the Coronavirus Pandemic

At the end of the day, Sarah Pierce, another policy analyst at MPI, says the next four years may bring a change of pace in changes to immigration policy, as Biden navigates the COVID-19 pandemic and other high-priority domestic issues.

During the Trump Administration, immigration was the top policy priority. They poured everything they had into enacting their agenda, Pierce said during the Nov. 9 webinar. I think under a Biden Administration were about to see the pace of immigration changes slow down significantly. Theres going to be a lot of questions about how much they can accomplish in the first 100 days, and really how much they can accomplish in four years.

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Write to Jasmine Aguilera at jasmine.aguilera@time.com.

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Biden Has Promised to Undo Trump's Immigration Policies. How Much Is He Really Likely to Reform? - TIME

Biden win revives immigration talk | TheHill – The Hill

President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenOutside groups flood Georgia with advertising buys ahead of runoffs Biden will receive @POTUS Twitter account on Jan. 20 even if Trump doesn't concede, company says Trump to participate in virtual G-20 summit amid coronavirus surge MOREs victory is reviving the hunt for one of Washingtons biggest white whales: immigration reform.

Talk of a potential agreement under Biden comes as Congress has tried and failed in recent years to clinch a deal related to the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the United States.

GOP senators pointed to immigration as one area of potential compromise under a government likely to be divided next year.

I think that would be a good thing to do, Sen. John CornynJohn CornynTrump keeps tight grip on GOP amid divisions Romney: Consequences of Trump actions during lame-duck 'potentially more severe' than transition delay The Hill's Morning Report - Presented by the UAE Embassy in Washington, DC - Trump, Biden clash over transition holdup, pandemic plans MORE (R-Texas) said about the potential to do immigration next year.

The challenge is youve got to get the votes, but that to me is one of my biggest disappointments in my time in the Senate, our inability to get that done, Cornyn said, adding that he would try to be part of that effort if the topic comes back up.

Sen. Lindsey GrahamLindsey Olin GrahamHackers love a bad transition The Hill's Campaign Report: Trump campaign files for Wis. recount l Secretaries of state fume at Trump allegations l Biden angered over transition delay Georgia elections chief: 'Emotional abuse'to mislead voters about fraud MORE (R-S.C.) during a recent call with reporters said there was room for deals between Republicans and Biden on several issues, and there may be some things we can do on immigration. You know, you got the Dreamers hanging out there.

I will be willing to work with the Biden administration, if he wins and Im not conceding that he will in ways to make the country stronger, Graham said, adding that Biden would have to decide if he wants to cut deals with Republicans.

Sen. Chuck GrassleyCharles (Chuck) Ernest GrassleyOvernight Health Care: Trump announces two moves aimed at lowering drug prices | Sturgis rally blamed for COVID-19 spread in Minnesota | Stanford faculty condemn Scott Atlas Cut tariffs and open US economy to fight COVID-19 pandemic Rick Scott tests positive for coronavirus MORE (R-Iowa), who will chair the Judiciary Committee if Republicans keep control of the Senate, didnt rule out action on immigration but warned it would depend on the parameters, which he said would need to be somewhere in between extremes on both sides.

Its kind of a case of the extreme points of view like people who think we can load up 12 million people and get them out of the country; if they want to do that, they cant be a part of it. And for the people who want people to be citizens yesterday, they cant be a part of it, Grassley said.

The shift to a Biden administration comes after President TrumpDonald John TrumpBen Carson says he's 'out of the woods' after being 'extremely sick' with COVID-19 Biden will receive @POTUS Twitter account on Jan. 20 even if Trump doesn't concede, company says Trump to participate in virtual G-20 summit amid coronavirus surge MORE took a hard line on both illegal and legal immigration during the past four years, waging a years-long fight over the border wall, trying to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, overhauling U.S. asylum policy and enacting a zero tolerance strategy that has left, according to court documents last month, at least 545 immigrant children yet to be reunited with their parents after the government separated them.

The Senate in 2018 was close to an agreement that would have provided $25 billion for border security in exchange for a path to citizenship for 1.8 million undocumented immigrants who came to the country as children, but the White House and the Department of Homeland Security helped tank it.

The House passed the DREAM Act in 2019, but the bill went nowhere in a GOP-controlled Senate.

If Democrats had been swept into the Senate majority, immigration reform was expected to be on their to-do list as the party considered ending the legislative filibuster.

Now, even if Democrats are able to force a 50-50 tie by flipping two Georgia seats in runoff elections in January, they would be well short of the 60 votes needed to pass a deal.

The uphill battle in Congress has immigration reform advocates urging Biden to make changes to the system through executive action, including rolling back Trump orders.

Biden is expected to quickly revive the DACA program, end the Trump administrations so-called Muslim ban and end construction on the U.S.-Mexico border wall. He is reportedly eyeing a freeze on deportations to give his administration time to issue new guidance for immigration agents. Biden also announced late last week that he would dramatically increase the refugee cap.

Ron Klain, Bidens incoming chief of staff, reiterated that addressing children brought into the country illegally as children would be one of the first actions taken by a Biden administration, saying it would be an action taken care of on Day One.

But immigration reform advocates are warning they will pressure Congress to take legislative action on immigration reform starting next year and wont just settle for executive actions.

Lorella Praeli, the president of Community Change, said during an event on Monday hosted by the National Immigration Forum that both Biden and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellBiden decides on pick for secretary of State OVERNIGHT ENERGY: House Democrats push Biden to pick Haaland as next Interior secretary | Trump administration proposal takes aim at bank pledges to avoid fossil fuel financing | Wasserman Schultz pitches climate plan in race to chair Appropriations Key McConnell ally: Biden should get access to transition resources MORE (R-Ky.) will feel some pressure.

A lot of people are deciding too early in my view ... to throw in the towel on Congress, to let Mitch McConnell off the hook, but I am unwilling, 100 percent unwilling to do that in this moment, she said, adding that there were multiple pathways to getting a path to citizenship.

Stuart Stevens, a longtime GOP strategist, said he thought it was in the best interest of the Republican Party to make a deal on immigration reform, saying it should be a win-win for both parties.

But pressed if he thought McConnell would be helpful, he added, Listen, Mitch McConnell and helpful are words Ive not tied together in a long time.

McConnell has generally been wary of bringing up items that divide his caucus. The Senates 2018 immigration votes, for example, were driven by leverage to reopen the government.

And the GOP caucus, even with Trump out of the White House, has immigration hawks that are likely to bristle at any talk of a deal with Biden. Sens. Tom CottonTom Bryant CottonMore conservatives break with Trump over election claims Warnock hit by Republicans over 'cannot serve God and the military' comment Republican senators urge Trump to label West Bank goods as 'Made in Israel' MORE (R-Ark.) and David PerdueDavid PerduePence campaigns in Georgia as Trump casts shadow on runoffs Loeffler faces ethics complaints for soliciting donations in US Capitol The Hill's 12:30 Report - Presented by Capital One - Pfizer, BioNTech apply for vaccine authorization MORE (R-Ga.) were behind a Trump push to reduce legal immigration, a plan that earned backlash even from fellow Republicans.

Fox Newss Tucker CarlsonTucker CarlsonMore conservatives break with Trump over election claims Ex-AG Holder urges GOP to speak against Trump efforts to 'subvert' election results The Hill's 12:30 Report - Presented by Capital One - Pfizer, BioNTech apply for vaccine authorization MORE immediately ripped Graham for his comments earlier this month, accusing him of being willing to sell out his voters with an amnesty deal.

Sen. Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzMcSally, staff asked to break up maskless photo op inside Capitol Capitol's COVID-19 spike could be bad Thanksgiving preview Republican senators urge Trump to label West Bank goods as 'Made in Israel' MORE (R-Texas), asked about making a deal on immigration with Biden, argued that Democrats would try to enact amnesty, a buzzword used on the right that stirs up political passions among base voters.

I think the Democrats want to see a massive amnesty plan, which would be a serious mistake, Cruz said.

Asked if he thought it was a mistake for his colleagues to even open the door on immigration with Biden, Cruz replied, Yes.

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Biden win revives immigration talk | TheHill - The Hill