Archive for the ‘Illegal Immigration’ Category

Kobach pushes bills to target illegal immigration in Kansas | The … – Wichita Eagle


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Kobach pushes bills to target illegal immigration in Kansas | The ...
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Secretary of State Kris Kobach wants the Kansas Highway Patrol to partner with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on immigration enforcement. Another ...
Donald Trump confidant Kris Kobach presses for tough Kansas immigration actionTopeka Capital Journal

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Kobach pushes bills to target illegal immigration in Kansas | The ... - Wichita Eagle

Trump claims Obama made deal to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia – PolitiFact

President Trump's reported heated phone call to Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.

Did Donald Trump really hang up on the Australian prime minister?

Thats what a Washington Post report based on anonymous sources says.

Reportedly, the heated Jan. 28 exchange was about a refugee agreement between the United States and Australia, countries that are usually close allies.

We cant know how the call really went down, but a few days later, Trump slammed the agreement publicly on Twitter.

"Do you believe it? The Obama Administration agreed to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia. Why? I will study this dumb deal!" Trump tweeted Feb. 1.

Trumps tweet mischaracterizes the deal in two ways. First, the deal involves fewer than 2,000 people. Thats not "thousands." Second, the individuals would not come to the United States illegally, but through the legal refugee program.

Background on the Australian deal

Australia has a strict policy against illegal maritime arrivals. The country has intercepted migrants at sea and sent them to regional processing centers on Pacific islands away from Australia, specifically Nauru and Manus. (Manus is part of Papua New Guinea).

Instances of abuse have been reported at the centers, with the United Nations calling for the closure of the Nauru facilities after claims of "violence, sexual assault, degrading treatment and self-harm."

Papua New Guineas Supreme Court in April 2016 ruled that detaining refugees at the Manus facility was illegal, because they had not willfully entered the island. Australian officials said in August they would close the Manus facility but still would not accept the detainees into their country.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said in November 2016 that his government reached an agreement with the United States for the resettlement of refugees held in its regional processing centers. Most of those refugees are from Iran, Iraq and Somalia.

The centers held 1,254 individuals not "thousands" as Trump said as of a November 2016 immigration detention report.

"The priority under this arrangement will be for resettlement of those who are most vulnerable, namely women, children and families," Turnbull said in a statement.

He also said the United States would assess the refugees and decide which ones would be resettled in America. He said the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees was supporting the arrangement.

Worldwide, the United States accepted 84,994 refugees in fiscal year 2016 (Oct. 1, 2015-Sept. 30, 2016) out of a cap of 85,000, according to data from the State Departments Refugee Processing Center.

Obamas administration last year said it would raise the refugee admission ceiling to 110,000 in fiscal year 2017. But in his Jan. 27 executive order, Trump said the entry of more than 50,000 refugees in fiscal 2017 "would be detrimental to the interests of the United States, and thus suspend any such entry until such time as I determine that additional admissions would be in the national interest."

Up to Jan. 27, the United States had admitted 32,125 refugees.

After extensive vetting, refugees arrive legally in the United States and are required by law to apply for a green card one year after their arrival.

The fate of the deal

The U.S.-Australian deal resurfaced after Trump signed an executive order on Jan. 27 temporarily halting the refugee admission program and the admission of nationals from seven countries -- Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen -- flagged by the Obama administration as terrorist hotbeds.

The White Houses official readout of the next days phone call simply states, "Both leaders emphasized the enduring strength and closeness of the U.S.-Australia relationship that is critical for peace, stability, and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and globally."

Turnbull told reporters on Jan. 30 that he and Trump had a "constructive" conversation, adding, "We also discussed the resettlement arrangement of refugees from Nauru and Manus, which had been entered into with the previous administration, and I thank President Trump for his commitment to honour that existing agreement."

The White House has given conflicting signals about the fate of the deal.

Sean Spicer, Trumps press secretary, said during a Jan. 31 press briefing that the deal to take in 1,250 refugees would go on, applying extreme vetting to potential arrivals as was agreed in the deal.

The day after Trumps tweet, Turnbull told the Wall Street Journal that Australia was still negotiating refugee agreements with other governments, but couldnt accept them given its laws banning the resettlement of asylum seekers coming by boat.

"Our expectation naturally, given the commitments that have been made, is that it will go ahead," Turnbull said. "The only option that isnt available to (the refugees) is bringing them to Australia for the obvious reasons that that would provide a signal to the people smugglers to get back into business."

Spicer, at a press briefing Feb. 2, said the president was "unbelievably disappointed" by the "horrible deal" cut by the Obama administration, but said the process would continue under "extreme vetting" conditions.

Given his opposition to the deal, Trump would be able to walk back on it, as it appears to be an executive-to-executive agreement, said Stephen W. Yale-Loehr, an immigration law professor at Cornell Law School. "The new U.S. executive could back away from what Obama agreed to," Yale-Loehr said.

Our ruling

Trump tweeted, "The Obama Administration agreed to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia."

Trumps referring to a deal for the United States to take in 1,250 people -- mostly from Iran, Iraq and Somalia -- held by Australia in offshore detention centers. The detainees were caught at sea by Australian officials as they tried to illegally land on the island.

The United States is expected to vet the individuals and determine who will be accepted as refugees. Refugees arrive in the United States legally.

Trumps claim is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True.

https://www.sharethefacts.co/share/e3995915-11af-4036-a175-903c2c7a4786

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Trump claims Obama made deal to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia - PolitiFact

Proposed bill would allow victims of crimes committed by illegal immigrants to sue politicians – HPPR

On Monday, a Republican lawmaker announced a bill that would allow victims of certain crimes committed by illegal immigrants to sue politicians who refuse to cooperate with federal immigration authorities.

As The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/2017/01/30/crime-victims-sue-politicians-sanctuary-cities/ reports, the proposal targets sanctuary cities like Denver, Boulder and Aurora, where police and other officials have said they wont enforce federal immigration laws.

The proposal puts the Colorado legislature in the middle of the divisive national battle over immigration, following President Donald Trumps executive order targeting so-called sanctuary cities and imposing a travel ban barring immigrants from several predominantly Muslim countries, including Iraq, Iran and Syria.

It isnt clear what liability politics would have under the proposal but the bills author, Rep. Dave Williams, who is Hispanic, said it would give victims of crimes committed by people in the country illegally in sanctuary cities the right to file both civil and criminal complaints against politicians who support such policies.

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Proposed bill would allow victims of crimes committed by illegal immigrants to sue politicians - HPPR

Local governments weigh Trump’s illegal immigration order – St. George Daily Spectrum

FILE - In this Jan. 4, 2016 photo, a U.S. Border Patrol agent drives near the U.S.-Mexico border fence in Santa Teresa, N.M. Can Donald Trump really make good on his promise to build a wall along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexican border to prevent illegal migration? Whats more, can he make Mexico pay for it? Sure, he can build it, but its not nearly as simple as he says.(Photo: Russell Contreras / Associated Press)

An executive order from President Donald Trump could change how state and local governments enforce laws on illegal immigration.

Police departments and other local agencies across the country have been studying the order, titled Enhancing Public Safety in the Interior of the United States, and trying to determine what impacts it could have on their day-to-day operations.

So far, the order had not amounted to any actual changes in policy or practice in southern Utahs largest cities and towns, and officials said the order is too new to know exactly what its impacts might be.

The order called for the homeland security secretary to begin work on a border wall, for the creation of more detention centers, for an increase in the number of Border Patrol agents, and for the administration to withhold federal funding from cities that do not comply with immigration enforcement orders.

But it also orders the Department of Homeland Security to expand its interior immigration enforcement program and work with local and state police departments to allow local jurisdictions to enforce immigration laws and suggests local officers be allowed to perform the functions of an immigration officer in the interior of the United States to the maximum extent permitted by law.

We cannot faithfully execute the immigration laws of the United States if we exempt classes or categories of removable aliens from potential enforcement, according to the order.

The no-tolerance policy, combined with threats to withhold funding from sanctuary cities that dont enforce immigration laws as ordered, sets the stage for conflicts between the Trump administration and some of the countrys biggest cities.

Cities and counties with significant immigrant populations have long followed a policy of tolerating undocumented immigrants who dont break the law as a way to maintain good relationships and prevent other crimes.

In St. George, police have worked closely with immigration officials for years to turn over individuals charged with committing other crimes who dont have current immigration paperwork, city attorney Shawn Guzman said.

City Council member Ed Baca said he thought Trumps order was mostly just trying to put into place in some other cities measures St. George has been implementing for years.

I think were ahead of the curve, he said.

But the order includes language that could give police more powers than they have typically tried to employ, language that has raised the ire of civil liberties advocates and solicited worries about racial profiling and deteriorating relationships between law enforcement and immigrant communities.

The U.S. Conference of Mayors, which represents more than 1,400 cities across the country, issued a joint statement with the Major Cities Chiefs Association, a group representing 63 of the largest police departments in the country, suggesting they had strong reservations about the orders provisions on withholding federal funds and argued the order did not supply clear direction about what constitutes a sanctuary jurisdiction.

Representatives with other national groups were more supportive of the order, however, including the Fraternal Order of Police and the National Sheriffs Association.

Jonathan Thompson, executive director of the NSA, said the presidents pledge would add needed manpower to the ranks of the Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, easing the dependence on local law enforcement.

Its key to remember that for too long sheriffs were the meat in the immigration enforcement sandwich, Thompson told the USA Today. No more. (Trump) is hiring 10,000 enforcement officers, which we have been calling for.

Follow David DeMille on Twitter, @SpectrumDeMille, and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/SpectrumDeMille. Call him at 435-674-6261.

Read or Share this story: http://www.thespectrum.com/story/news/2017/02/01/local-governments-weigh-trumps-illegal-immigration-order/97368888/

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Local governments weigh Trump's illegal immigration order - St. George Daily Spectrum

Trump draft executive order full of sound and fury on immigration, welfare and deportation – Washington Post

A draft plan, under discussion inside the Trump administration, promises to exclude would-be immigrants who might need public assistance and to deport, whenever possible, those already dependent on welfare.

The draft executive order, as written, illuminates one of the ways in which the Trump administration plans to deliver on campaign-trail promises to halt what candidate Trump repeatedly described as the intentional abuse of American social service programs. The effort, as described, appears to want to reduce immigrants impact on American taxpayers and the workforce. But there are just a few problems with Trumps draft order.

[Trump administration circulates more draft immigration restrictions, focusing on protecting U.S. jobs]

They begin with the facts.

The language in the order, as written, portraysimmigrants generally as a drain on the American taxpayer, and would direct the government to address the issue in several ways.The draft order would:

The order calls for lots of research too, including how the estimated $100 billion in savings the order says these activitieswould generate could be brought to bear on domestic poverty along with regular reports monitoring the number of immigrants blocked, reimbursements demanded and the status of monitoring efforts to stop immigrants from receiving public benefits.

[See the draft executive orders here]

But, almost none of the issues identified in the draft order exist as they are described in the order.

Immigration is complex. Citizenship status can change and, in many U.S. households, citizens and legal and illegal immigrants live together, making the rights and benefits available to them difficult to quantify or classify as aid to aliens. Long-standing U.S. law already makes it rare for noncitizens to receive most forms of public assistance, such as cash payments. And, experts in immigration law and the nations public assistance programs say theres little data to support the administrations claim that immigrants disproportionately draw on public aid.

There are at least 5.1 million children living in the United States with a parent who is an unauthorized immigrant, according to an analysis published by the Migration Policy Institute in January 2016. More than 70 percent of these children are also U.S. citizens, eligible for a full slate of social service benefits as any other child in a family with a similar income. And immigrant children are more likely than others to live in low-income families. As many of those children are minors, they cannot simply be given control of the federal food or cash aid for which they qualify. The benefits have to be controlled by their parents, immigrants who are the heads of their households.

These families offer a helpful framework for thinking about any promise to surgically extract needy immigrants, saidTanya Broder, a senior staff attorney at the National Immigration Law Center.

The reality is that immigrants and citizens live together, work together and inhabit the same communities and neighborhoods, said Broder, who specializes in policies affecting access to health care, public education and aid. For good reason, we want every baby to be born healthy, every young child to have basic nutrition and the people around us to be physically healthy enough to contribute to our economy. When you ignore that, the consequences can quickly become more costly in terms of human beings and taxpayer dollars than providing services in the first place.

Though the draft orders characterize a ban on immigrants receiving welfare as something new, or at least insufficiently enforced, some of what it lays out as proposals for new immigration and welfare policy already exists. And what the order depicts as poor enforcement is actually more like a long line of laws, legal decisions, rules and official guides for federal employees that have made public charge deportations rare.

[Donald Trumps false comments connecting Mexican immigrants and crime]

For more than 100 years, U.S. law has allowed federal officials to bar immigrants who, based on a specific formula, seem likely to need public assistance after arrival. That test is known as the public charge law. The law technically allows federal immigration authorities to deport immigrants who become public dependents within five years of their arrival and prevent legal immigrants from moving toward citizenship for the same reason.

Individuals living in the United States who want to help their relatives enter the country also are already required to sign an affidavit attesting to the fact that they earn enough money to support themselves and those hoping to immigrate. Anyone signing such an affidavit also agrees to pay back public assistance should their relatives receive it.

On top of that, in 1996, President Bill Clinton signed The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, widely known as welfare reform. In addition to the lifetime limits for all welfare recipients, the law significantly restricted immigrant access to the U.S. social safety net.

It was definitely the biggest change in policy regarding immigrant access to means-tested benefits ever, saidRon Haskins, one of the chief architects of the welfare reform law and a Republican congressional committee staffer who worked with the Clinton administration on the matter. Today, Haskins is a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, where he co-directs the Center on Children and Families.

Those reforms barred illegal immigrants from many programs designed for the poor, saidAudrey Singer, a senior fellow in the Metropolitan Housing and Communities Policy Center at the Urban Institute. She studies demographic change, immigration, global refugee movements and their municipal implications.

Much to the chagrin of many Republicans in Congress, some of these rules were scaled back during the George W. Bush and Obama administrations, Haskins said. The reason for the rollbacks: Many Democrats were never fond of the specifics of the welfare reform law, Haskins said. Clinton was unsure, and just two cabinet members and advisers in the room with Clinton when he decided to sign the 1996 law thought the immigrant provisions should be included, Haskins said.

Politics wasnt the only driver. In the years that followed welfare reform, documented reports of abuses, inaccurate reads of the public charge law, exorbitant fines 33 times the value of benefits provided and other stories began to reach Washington, Broder said.

By 1999, administration officials clarified the public charge law so that participation in food aid programs, seeking help with medical care, job training, education or child care clearly could not be considered violations of the countrys prohibition on public dependency. Since 2002, immigrant children have been eligible for food aid during the five-year waiting period required for adults, and since 2009, states have had the option of providing health care coverage to legal immigrant children and pregnant women within their first years in the United States.

Still today, immigrant access to Social Security assistance is seldom granted, Singer said. Legal immigrants including green-card holders must navigate a mandatory five-year waiting period for eligibility in most aid programs. And, once on cash aid rolls, legal immigrants become subject to the same lifetime limits that apply to everyone else. Whats more, some immigrants never become eligible for cash aid, Medicaid or the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP). To do so they have to fit certain criteria and live in a certain states. Across the country, refugees people fleeing war, famine or persecution receive six months of assistance after they arrive in the U.S., then become ineligible for most aid for several years.

None of that adds up to a situation anything like that implied by Trumps draft executive order. Immigrants do not make up overwhelming majorities of those receiving public assistance.

Immigrant families are less likely to receive food benefits than other households, according an Urban Institute analysis of federal 2008 and 2009 SNAP data. The pattern held but the gap between immigrant and native-born families narrowed when it came to cash aid and public health insurance.

In poor families, about 18 percent of children with native-born parents received cash help Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) in 2008 and 2009, compared with about 12 percent of children with foreign-born parents, according to the study. Among children in poor families, 77 percent of those with U.S.-born parents and 69 percent of those with foreign-born parents had Medicaid or CHIP coverage.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture did not respond to a request for detailed data on the citizenship and national origin status of more recent or current SNAP (food stamps) recipients. A Department of Health and Human Services representative said the department does not have such data for Medicaid users. But an annual report on TANF recipients compiled by the agency suggests strongly that the inferences in Trumps draft order are not well founded.

In fiscal year 2015, 744,257 adults were enrolled in the cash assistance program along with about 2.37 million children who live with ineligible adults. That group of children includes some living with legal and illegal immigrant parents. But,noncitizens made up about 280,300 or just 9 percent of all the people receivingcashaid.

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No matter what you call it, Trumps immigration order will be tough to overturn, legal analysts say

Restaurants depend on immigrants. Trumps orders could hit them particularly hard.

Stephen Bannons apparent references to anti-immigrant Know-Nothing Party dont seem so coincidental anymore

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Trump draft executive order full of sound and fury on immigration, welfare and deportation - Washington Post