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The time for progressives to get behind NYC mayoral candidate Maya Wiley is now – Yahoo News

OPINION: Ifeoma Ike, who previously worked on the mayoral campaign of Dianne Morales, says as a senior advisor she believes Maya Wiley is the best woman for the job.

A lot of people call this political season messy. I call it a beautiful struggle. When I agreed to be the senior advisor to NYC mayoral candidate Dianne Morales, most of my peers didnt believe I had enough time to help transform a campaign many people still didnt know existed.

What many dont know is that I said yes when both my parents were ill with COVID-19. Both essential workers, I was haunted by the thought that news of effective vaccinations came too late for my working-class, immigrant family. And for full transparency, it took a month for me to commit to any electoral work; not only because of the crowded field, but also because I was disappointed at the lack of our citys investment in educating all communities about rank choice voting.

What motivated me to join was that I knew our people deserved more than the status quo: a platform willing to reach the root causes of race and gender inequity that the majority of New Yorkers are experiencing. As a former City Hall executive deputy director and a lawyer, I also knew that we needed a mayor who truly understood the city and possessed a record of building justice-minded infrastructure, not just using social justice language.

New York City Mayoral candidate Maya Wiley speaks to the media on June 02, 2021 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Like many political operatives, early mornings and late nights was my daily campaign routine. Im also the CEO of a social impact startup with a team of nine people; working two full-time jobs requires a lot of coffee. The entire season has been a struggle: some progressive spaces loved our platform, but questioned our viability; the press failed to cover the buildup of our transformative campaign; and for the longest, it was only eight of us building a full operation.

But what we didnt miss was our people.

We remained on the ground, even during a pandemic, supporting mutual aid efforts, providing resources to young mothers in need of childcare and signing up seniors for vaccinations while also competing in a rigorous cycle of forums, fundraisers and events. The thought of running politics as usual never crossed our minds, and the more we met the community where they were, the more we were able to connect them with a vision that put those left behind at the center.

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This is also why this past week has been so painful to experience. What took other campaigns a year to achieve, our scrappy team accomplished in five months. Endorsements and increased media coverage were welcomed affirmations, but its really the family we built that Im forever grateful for, especially my fellow Black femmes and immigrant and first-gen siblings.

But like so many things began to fall apart in the public eye, and I walked away from a campaign I helped build, I reminded myself that politics, in itself, isnt the movement. People are. No one candidate possesses all of the solutions. And in the most transformative political season of our city, no one can afford to sit on the sidelines, including me.

Exhausted, but still determined, I am proud to join Maya Wileys mayoral campaign team as a senior advisor because the moment calls for the wide tent of progressives to coalesce and model something different. Maya and I dont agree on everything, and recently had a 21-minute debate over how much the NYPD should be defunded. I argued that the police state is pervasive not only in our streets, but in our schools and childcare systems and that defunding by $3 billion is where we need to start.

New York City Mayoral candidate Maya Wiley speaks to the media on June 02, 2021 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Maya didnt disagree, substantively, and shared that $1 billion is where shed start, followed by a full audit to determine how and where to divest from. I pushed back, sharing how communities feel betrayed by the current administrations tale of two cities rhetoric that ultimately expanded policing, even while we were quarantined.

And thats why Ive invested so much time into a safety strategy, Ify, and were rolling out our housing platform that I think youd like, she said.

That simple statement revealed two key things: that Maya understands that our communities are not falling for more failed promises; and that we share an understanding of safety beyond policing. And after viewing her recent video reminding us of the brutal tactics employed by NYPD on protesters last summer, I fully believe our city under her leadership can mobilize to fight the police union and confront practices originally engineered to target Black bodies.

Maya is, indeed, our citys best chance at stopping the many special interests that continue to marginalize Black and Brown communities the very communities that kept us alive last year.

Outside of this race, Maya was a mentor to those of us who worked inside City Hall and endured frequent misogynoir as we tried to advocate for our people. Maya helped advance many of my teams projects and she and I co-drafted the citys first-ever Equity Executive Order. When I organized a space for women of color at City Hall just to breathe during the workday, I asked Maya if she had time in her busy schedule to speak. She came in like the rest of us, plopped in the chair, and exhaled Whew, yall I am tired! to which we each chimed in our agreement in our own unique, sisterly way.

That memory is not easily erased from my mind, and with every debate we have on policies, I also know her character and the space she has provided me in moments of stress and frustration. That matters.

Its an honor to advise leaders who dare to be the first; leaders who dare to be bold; leaders who dare to confront systems. Our survival is connected to what happens on June 22. We cannot let the mess of this political season take our eyes off of whats possible for our people. There will be time to analyze what did and didnt work in this political cycle. Until then, lets struggle together with our best chance to reclaim City Hall.

Time for us to get behind Maya Wiley and rank her number one.

Ifeoma Ike, Senior Advisor for Maya Wiley's NYC Mayoral campaign

Ifeoma Ike is an activist, CEO of social impact and equity firm, Pink Cornrows and creator of the Black Policy Lab.

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The time for progressives to get behind NYC mayoral candidate Maya Wiley is now - Yahoo News

Unions, progressive groups boost Huttle’s ground game – New Jersey Globe | New Jersey Politics

Assemblywoman Valerie Vainieri Huttle (D-Englewood) has moved her primary campaign into its final stages, her focus falling on door-knocking in an effort to outrun her onetime running mate for Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinbergs (D-Teaneck) Senate seat.

On Saturday morning, her campaign launched 53 canvassers from their Englewood headquarters, the volunteer ranks boosted by union officials from Communications Workers of America Local 1037, Service Employees International Union Local 1199 and members of Healthcare Professionals and Allied Employees.

Thats on top of whatever the New Jersey Working Families Alliance and its state director, anti-line activist Sue Altman, can muster to get out the vote for Huttle, whose campaign intends to continue their door-knocking operation through election day.

This campaign is powered by the people. We are going to win this for the people, not only of district 37 but for the people of New Jersey, Huttle said at the canvass launch. We are going to continue that progressive movement and be the champions for all of us who are here today.

Huttle and her longtime running mate, Assemblyman Gordon Johnson (D-Englewood), are both running to succeed Weinberg, who is not seeking re-election this year.

Johnson moves into the races closing days with a favorable ballot position afforded by the Bergen County line and endorsements from some of the states most prominent Democrats, including Weinberg and Gov. Phil Murphy.

Huttles backers are mainly progressive groups, including Garden State Equality. Steven Goldstein, the groups founder, serves as one of her campaign co-chairs.

But progressives see advantages in the assemblywomans off-the-line campaign unavailable to challengers elsewhere in the state.

Incumbency is the obvious one. Huttle has held her seat in the legislature since 2006, and she served five years on the countys freeholder board before that. The length of that tenure brings name recognition that will likely help offset the boost Johnson gets from his position on the Bergen County line.

She also isnt without financial resources. Nearly half of the $322,269 she reported raising through May 7 came from a $151,000 personal loan she made to her campaign. Thats not far off from the $185,152 Johnson and his running mates reported in 29-day pre-primary reports filed with the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission.

Its not clear how the fundraising race will shake out in 11-day pre-primary reports due for release on Monday, though Johnson has benefitted from an undisclosed amount of independent spending made by Stronger Foundations, a super PAC with ties to Operating Engineers Local 825.

Each candidate is fielding their own slates for Assembly. Huttle tapped Teaneck Councilwoman Gervonn Romney Rice and Tenafly Councilwoman Lauren Kohn Dayton, while Johnsons team includes former Tenafly Councilwoman Shama Haider and former Englewood Cliffs Councilwoman Ellen Park.

The New Jersey Globe attempted to cover a visit to a Hackensack vaccination site Johnson was set to make at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, but that fell through because the assemblyman was expected to arrive an hour behind schedule, if not more.

His campaign declined to make Johnson available by phone in the evening, citing Saturdays scorching heat and the extent of Johnsons campaigning that day.

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Unions, progressive groups boost Huttle's ground game - New Jersey Globe | New Jersey Politics

Presidential Immunity, the First Amendment and the Capitol Riot – Lawfare

In February, Rep. Bennie Thompson, chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, sued President Donald Trump, his lawyer Rudy Giuliani, and the far-right extremist group the Oath Keepers, among others, for damages arising from the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection. The lawsuit, brought by the NAACP and soon joined by 10 other members of Congress who were present in the Capitol that day, alleged violations of 42 U.S.C. 1985(1), a Reconstruction-era statute creating civil liability for conspiracies that prevent public officials from holding any office or discharging any duties.

Last week Trump, Giuliani and the Oath Keepers filed their motions to dismiss. The defendants raise a variety of arguments in the motions, some of which are peripheral, speculative or simply incoherent. But the core of the defenses for Trump and Giulianithat the pair were exercising their First Amendment rights in their statements up to and during Jan. 6, and that Trump has absolute immunity for official actions taken during his presidencyare formidable. The lawsuit will likely continue in some form, but its certainly possible that Thompson v. Trump will become Thompson v. Oath Keepers before long.

Presidential Immunity

As one of us argued when the lawsuit was first brought, Trumps strongest argument is that he enjoys absolute civil immunity for actions taken in his official capacity as president. As the Supreme Court explained in Nixon v. Fitzgeraldand as Trumps brief emphasizesformer presidents are entitled to absolute Presidential immunity from damages liability for acts within the outer perimeter of [their] official responsibility. The importance of immunity for official acts of the president, and executive branch officials, is further reflected in the Westfall Act, a statutory tort immunity for federal employees, which Trump argues also bars the suit on the grounds that the allegations arose out of his allegations of political speech, clearly within the scope of his employment.

Presidential immunity is not unbounded. In Clinton v. Jones, another case that Trump cites, the Supreme Court permitted a lawsuit against a sitting president for purely private acts taken largely before President Clinton assumed office. The question, then, isassuming that Jones could be extended to actions taken taken wholly during a presidents stay in officewhether Trumps repeated lies about the 2020 election and his inflammatory rhetoric at the Stop the Steal rally were within the outer perimeter of his office. In other words, the court might have to decide if the outer perimeter encompasses remarks that included If you dont fight like hell youre not going to have a country anymore and We will never give up, we will never concede.

There is no straightforward test for the boundaries of presidential immunity under Fitzgerald. Rather, the Supreme Court has applied a functional approach that stresses the diversity of the presidents duties and responsibilities and the need to preserve as much latitude as possible for the presidents functioning. As the Supreme Court wrote in Fitzgerald, Cognizance of this personal vulnerability frequently could distract a President from his public duties, to the detriment of not only the President and his office but also the Nation that the Presidency was designed to serve. Thus, even illegal actions do not necessarily fall outside the realm of official duties.

Here, Trumps brief invokes the recent history of election challenges by federal officials to argue that [p]ost-election challenges are not unusual. In a lengthy introduction, Trump points to several instances of Democratic politicians challenging the validity of elections. Of course, these comparisons miss important contextmost obviously, the scope and severity of Trumps attacks on the democratic process and the political disturbance that it caused.

But here Trumps tendency to believe his own lies may paradoxically strengthen his argument, as it did during his first impeachment: By many accounts Trump really did (and still does) believe that the election was stolen. Delusional and baseless as that belief was (and is), Trump appears to have been sincere in believing that questioning the election was necessary to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. In his motion, Trump explicitly argues that the President questioning whether election procedures comported with the Constitution and holding a rally for those who also were concerned with fair processare in fact Presidential duties as the Constitution requires that the President preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States... and take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed[.] Trumps understanding of his constitutional obligations was a perversion of those very obligationswhich was the core of both of his impeachmentsbut behavior grounded in a perverse understanding of an official duty may still remain an official duty.

The First Amendment

Even if Trumps immunity argument fails, his motion to dismiss makes a colorable argument that his rhetoric, however reprehensible, was constitutionally protected speech. And for Giuliani, who as a private citizen cannot claim immunity, the First Amendment is his strongest defense.

As with all cases involving speech that leads to violence, the key case here is Brandenburg v. Ohio: The constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do not permit a State to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or of law violation except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action (emphasis added). Imminence is a vague term, but the substantial case law devoted to its elaboration has made clear that there is a high bar for punishing speech on the grounds that it leads to violence.

The Brandenburg test applies to civil cases as well. For example, Trump cites NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co. (an ironic detail, given the NAACPs leading role in bringing this lawsuit), in which the Supreme Court unanimously overturned a Mississippi Supreme Court decision finding an NAACP that boycotted businesses in Claiborne, Mississippi, liable for lost business. Although the field secretary of the NAACP chapter, Charles Evers (who, in another twist, endorsed Trump 50 years later) reportedly told a large gathering, If we catch any of you going in any of them racist stores, were gonna break your damn neck, the Supreme Court recognized that the speech was protected under Brandenburg because [a]n advocate must be free to stimulate his audience with spontaneous and emotional appeals for unity and action in a common cause. Trump cites the case to underscore the Supreme Courts position that speech on issues of public matters sits at the highest rung of the hierarchy of First Amendment values.

Of course, there are important differences between the facts of Brandenburg and Claiborne on the one hand and those of Jan. 6 on the other. Most importantly, in neither Brandenburg nor Claiborne Hardware did violence immediately following the speech at issue; on Jan. 6 it did. Indeed, as the court made clear in Claiborne Hardware, [i]f that language had been followed by acts of violence, a substantial question would be presented whether Evers could be held liable for the consequences of that unlawful conduct. By contrast, Trump ended his Jan. 6 speech around 1:10 p.m., telling his supporters, Were going to the Capitol, and his supporters had broken windows to enter the Capitol at 2:30 p.m.

Ultimately, determining whether a causal connection exists between Trumps and Giulianis speech and the Capitol riot will depend on a careful examination of both the speech and the larger context. Here both sides have plausible arguments. Trump and Giuliani argue in their motions that the majority of their rhetoric was peaceful; Trump, for example, points to his encouragement to the crowd to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. And Giuliani also argues that even his most inflammatory rhetoric was, all things considered, mild. His motion describes his now-infamous call to trial by combat as clearly hyperbolic and not literal[.] In truth, from Giuliani it does seem like just one more example of his trademark over-the-top, octogenarian puffery.

But however Trump and Giuliani try to spin their participation in the Jan. 6 rally, this was not the case of some isolated rabble-rousers ranting on a street corner. The president of the United States and his chief lawyerhimself a world-famous public figure and one-time leading presidential candidateused flagrant lies to rile up hundreds of people, many of them armed members of extremist militias, to march down to the Capitol and express their displeasure at the peaceful transition of power. Since Jan. 6, some rioters, including the QAnon Shaman, have even argued in separate criminal proceedings that they would not have stormed the Capitol but for the specific words of the then-President. As one Capitol rioters defense lawyer said in court, The president of the United States of America was telling citizens something evil has happened and you all have to go fix it.

Trump points to the unique features of the situation as a reason to extend even stronger First Amendment protections to their speech. As one of the cases that Trump cites makes clear, political speech is entitled to the fullest possible measure of constitutional protection. And public figures, and the president in particular, can plausibly argue that courts should be particularly careful not to chill their speech, in part because of the same separation-of-powers concern that underlies presidential immunity and in part because of the unique role that presidential communication plays in American democracy.

Theres no obvious answer to the First Amendment arguments in this case, not least because of the profoundly unprecedented nature of what occurred on Jan. 6. The court may be able to avoid a difficult First Amendment analysis in Trumps case if it finds that the lawsuit must be dismissed on presidential immunity grounds. But since immunity is not an option for Giuliani, the court will likely have to engage with the First Amendment at least with respect to him.

Statutory Elements

Constitutional issues aside, Thompsons suit raises standard issues of statutory interpretation and civil procedure. Here Trump, Giuliani and the Oath Keepers make a wide variety of arguments. Some of these are fairly technicalTrump, for example, argues that members of Congress cant sue under 1985 because, as elected representatives, they are neither officers under the United States nor do they hold office under the United States. And the Oath Keepers argue that members of Congress cant sue under 1985 because the Constitution provides that Electoral College votes are to be counted and certified in the Presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, and thus the power at issue is an institutional one held by the two houses of Congress, not by any individual congressperson.

But the core statutory claim that all three defendants make is simply that the conspiracy that 1985 prohibits has not been adequately pleaded. The first requirement of any civil plaintiff is to provide a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief. Importantly, it is not enough simply to assert facts that would give rise to a cause of action; the plaintiffs allegation must be facially plausible in that it pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged. And the more particular the facts the plaintiff alleges, the more likely it is that the complaint will satisfy a motion to dismiss.

As one of us has previously explained, the question of whether Trump and Giuliani in particular conspired to incite a riot against the Capitol is a difficult one:

[C]onspiracy defendants must have a shared objective and [t]he defendant held liable as part of the conspiracy must have intended to bring about the tortious wrong that was the subject of the agreement. Here, the tort is to to prevent, by force, intimidation, or threat one of the 1985 predicates. Based on the planning alleged in the complaint, this should be relatively straightforward to establish in the case of the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys, two of the named defendants. Establishing this as to Giuliani (or Trump, assuming his immunity claim fails) will be more difficult, as their degree of coordination with the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys remains unknown.

The test for whether a complaint alleges sufficient facts to plausibly establish a claim is notoriously vagueor, as the Supreme Court has euphemistically explained, is context-specific, requiring the reviewing court to draw on its experience and common sense. The evidence is likely sufficient to satisfy pleading standards for the Oath Keepers, given the voluminous physical and digital evidence of that groups involvement in coordinating many of the events of Jan. 6. But a judge could legitimately conclude either way as to the claims against Trump and Giuliani. Of course, if Trumps immunity and Trumps and Giulianis First Amendment claims are accepted, that will render the statutory issues moot.

***

Thompsons lawsuit is far from dead in the water, but, at least with respect to Trump and Giuliani, it faces formidable constitutional and perhaps statutory challenges. And if Thompson is unsuccessful, his legal failure will underscore an important point: Across a number of constitutional, statutory, and procedural doctrines, the U.S. legal system is not well placed to deal with presidential attacks on American democracy. If accountability for Trump and his enablers is to be had, the nations political elites, and the voters who support them, will have to play the leading role.

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Presidential Immunity, the First Amendment and the Capitol Riot - Lawfare

My Turn: Whatever happened to ‘originalism?’ – Concord Monitor

The Supreme Courts decision to hear a case pertaining to New Yorks strict limits on carrying guns outside the home provides conservative justices the opportunity to apply one of their pet theories: originalism.If they are intellectually honest about doing so, the restrictions will stand.

One of the conservatives favorite tropes over the past several decades is a defense of the original intent of the founders. Conservatives have deployed this judicial doctrine against what they decry as judicial activism, rulings on the part of judges that, conservatives insist, abrogate the separation of powers mandated by the founders in the Constitution. Curiously, however, these same conservatives have yet to apply originalismto the Second Amendment.

The proper approach to the Constitution, these originalists argue, is to discern what the founders intended rather than treat the Constitution as a living document that articulates fixed principles that must be adapted to changing historical and cultural circumstances.

As the late Antonin Scalia, the Supreme Court justice most identified with originalism, said in 2012, The Constitution is a static being. A decade earlier Scalia had declared, The Constitution I apply is not living but dead, or as I put it, enduring.

Originalists, for instance, insisted that the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment should not be applied to sexual orientation and the right to marry. Because the amendment was drafted to protect freed slaves, the argument goes, it has no applicability to same-sex marriage.

For Scalia and other originalists, determining original intent requires,immersing oneself in the political and intellectual atmosphere of the time, somehow placing out of mind knowledge that we have which an earlier age did not, and putting on beliefs, attitudes, philosophies, prejudices and loyalties that are not those of our day.

Some conservatives have taken originalism to ridiculous extremes. Years ago, while touring the South with students from the Columbia School of Journalism, I sat in shocked disbelief as Roy S. Moore, former chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court (and, more recently, defeated Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate) informed us that the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment applied only to Christianity because the founders did not know any religion besides Christianity. That assertion, of course, is demonstrably false. The founders were well aware of Jews and Muslims as well as other religions, but it illustrates conservatives almost slavish allegiance to originalism.

Lets return to Scalias comments about immersing oneself in the political and intellectual atmosphere of the time and shift our attention from the First Amendment to the Second Amendment, which reads, A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

Surely any self-respecting originalist, someone sincerely trying to understand the political and intellectual atmosphere of the time, would not ignore the full text of the amendment. Although the National Rifle Association and other gun advocates routinely quote the second half of the amendment, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed, a more honest reading would include the initial clause,A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State.

Indeed, historians have demonstrated that the founders were eager to ensure that militias were properly armed against the British. Very likely, therefore, the founders intended to secure the right to bear arms for members of militias. Whenever I see a gun enthusiast swaggering with a firearm, Im tempted to ask (very politely, of course, and in a conversational tone)the name and location of his militia. Tempted, as I say, but Ive found that discretion is the greater part of valor when dealing with someone heavily armed.

Even if we set aside the militia argument, an originalist approach to the Second Amendment, one concerned about the political and intellectual atmosphere of the time, would surely strain to justify a constitutional right to brandish the modern weapons used to create the carnage we have seen again and again. Did the founders really intend to ensure civilian access to the AR-15 essentially the semi-automatic version of the militarys M16 automatic rifle that a mentally unbalanced teenager used to kill 17 in Parkland, Florida? Or the semi-automatic weapons used in Boulder, Orlando, Las Vegas, Sandy Hook, Aurora, San Bernardino, Pittsburgh or Midland/Odessa? (Im sure I missed a few in that accounting.)

A true originalist might reasonably argue for the constitutional right to wield a musket, but modern weapons of war, with their power, range and capacity, would surely go beyond the bounds of original intent. The founders had no knowledge of such weapons. Instead, the National Rifle Association has announced yet another advertising campaign, this one for $2 million, to ensure constitutional rights and thwart any attempt at sensible gun safety, and lawmakers in Texas recently voted to allow anyone to carry weapons without a license.

After still more horrific shootings (Indianapolis, San Jose, Miami Beach) we hear once again that conservatives' thoughts and prayers are with the victims families. Rather than accept another round of empty pieties, we should demand that they, along with Scalias acolytes on the Supreme Court, embrace their own rhetoric and apply the doctrine of original intent to the Second Amendment, thereby clearing the way for sensible measures on gun safety.

(Randall Balmer is a professor at Dartmouth College andauthor of Solemn Reverence: The Separation of Church and State in American Life.)

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My Turn: Whatever happened to 'originalism?' - Concord Monitor

How can Tunisia and Europe solve the migrant influx? – Africanews English

The Tunisian Coast has seen a peak in migrant departures to Europe in recent months.

But a solution to the crisis cannot just come from Europe, Tunisian President Kais Saied said in Brussels when he met with the presidents of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, and the European Council, Charles Michel.

In an interview with Euronews, he said that migrants who arrive illegally in Europe from Tunisia or North Africa are encouraged by networks in Europe, which exploit them and violate their fundamental rights.

"Who receives them in the north? When they turn to the fields or to some factories, and work in the so-called black or paperless work, who exploits them and who benefits from it? Here also, it is necessary to fight the networks that traffic in human beings within Europe. We must give man his right everywhere," Saied said.

For the Tunisian president, it is necessary to look for the reasons that push young people to migrate, such as the lack of job opportunities. But he asks to take also into consideration the positive side of skilled migrants, as Europe profits from it.

"We must also talk about the regular migration of a number of scholars. In the past year, nearly five hundred doctors went to Europe," he said.

"They are absolutely invaluable human resources. We must address the issue from all angles, not one. One is limited to the presence of a number of miserable poor migrants who have no hope in life... The issue cannot be addressed unilaterally, nor can it be with a pure security approach."

The U.N. refugee agency says most new arrivals land in Italy and Spain from Tunisia and Algeria.

The EU is working on a deal with Tunisia to offer economic help to reduce migrant sea crossings.

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How can Tunisia and Europe solve the migrant influx? - Africanews English