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UK: Immigration reform will see creation of "fully digital border" – The PIE News

Under the reforms travellers will have to have an ETA before entering the country. Ministers have said that the fully digital system will be operational by the end of 2025.

Our new plan will make it easier to identify potential threats before they reach the border

It is hoped the use of ETAs will make the UKs immigration system more secure by automatically checking for criminals from other countries and allowing more accurate statistics.

This year, we will end the use of insecure ID cards for people to enter our country and we will apply tougher UK criminality rules, said Patel during a speech at a conference organised by think tanks Bright Blue and British Future.

We are working on further reforms, including Electronic Travel Authorisations, as part of a simpler and more secure, universal permissions to travel requirement.

Our new plan will make it easier to identify potential threats before they reach the border, through targeted and effective interventions from co-ordinated multi-agency operations.

Patel said that the UKs new digital border will provide the ability to count people in and count people out of the country.

We will have a far clearer picture of who is here and whether they should be and will act when they are not, she added.

The home secretary said that there will be wholescale reform of the UKs immigration system.

She said that anything short of this would not meet the demands of the British people.

They want a new system that works for the law-abiding majority and against those who abuse our hospitality and generosity.

One that welcomes those most in need of sanctuary and one that slams the door on dangerous criminals, she said.

Patel acknowledged that the UK government still wants to attract top talent from around the world.

Yes, we want employers to train and invest in our domestic workforce. But we know that they always need access to global talent.

This is why the system is designed to keep the UK at the forefront of innovation. We are introducing bespoke routes to enable more students, scientists, academics, investors, and entrepreneurs to come here, she said.

Patel claimed that the UKs global talent route for leaders in science, engineering, digital technology, medicine, humanities, arts, and culture is already thriving.

She noted that recent reforms mean that prestigious prize-winners can fast-track the endorsement process and make a single visa application.

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UK: Immigration reform will see creation of "fully digital border" - The PIE News

Watch: ProPublica and The Texas Tribune lead conversation on border policy – The Texas Tribune

Migrants were taken into custody by U.S. Customs and Border Protection a total of 178,622 times in April a 21-year high, according to new federal statistics. Most were immediately expelled under a pandemic health order. But increasingly convoluted border policy from the Biden administration and unevenly enforced Mexican law means some migrants are granted entrance into the U.S. depending on various factors. Who is allowed in and who isnt under the Biden administrations confusing border policy at times have even seasoned experts at a loss.

On Thursday, May 27, ProPublica-Texas Tribune investigative unit reporter Lomi Kriel moderated a conversation with Theresa Cardinal Brown, managing director of immigration and cross-border policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center; Alex Nowrasteh, director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute; Ursela Ojeda, policy adviser at the Womens Refugee Commission; and Andrew Selee, president of the Migration Policy Institute.

They discussed the policy decisions that have led to so much confusion and what to expect in the upcoming months, in addition to answering questions about the border and immigration reform.

Tribune events are supported through contributions from our founding investors and members. Though donors and corporate sponsors underwrite Texas Tribune events, they play no role in determining the content, panelists or line of questioning.

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Watch: ProPublica and The Texas Tribune lead conversation on border policy - The Texas Tribune

Dreamers want White House and Congress to do more for their protection – Baptist News Global

The Biden Administration must do more to protect DACA than invite Dreamers to the White House and streamline the bureaucratic process that grants temporary residency to immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally as children, recipients of the program say.

So far, the president has given little more than the lip service and the typical rhetoric politicians offer in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program, said Ricardo Morones Torres, an Austin, Texas, resident and law school graduate who has enjoyed DACA protections since 2013.

Theres always talk but not enough action, Torres said. We are not seeing any heavy lifting or pushing for immigration reform.

On May 14, Biden met with Dreamers a term gleaned from previous Congressional Dream Act proposals to prevent deportations and grant working status to immigrants who grew up in the U.S. to express his support for that program, for migrant farmworkers, Temporary Protective Status holders and other immigrants considered essential to the U.S. economy.

The president and the Dreamers also discussed the continued need for immigration reform and the White Houses strong support for the Dream and Promise Act and the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, two bills that have already passed the House with bipartisan support and are awaiting action in the Senate, a White House statement said.

Both measures would provide paths to citizenship for DACA recipients while enabling the government to reject applicants considered threats to national security, according to an analysis by the National Law Review.

And the presidents U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021, introduced in Congress in February, would make about 11 million undocumented immigrants eligible for lawful protective immigrant, or LPI, status. Immigrants working in essential services also would be eligible while immigrants who came into the U.S. as children, including Dreamers, would qualify for lawful permanent status.

As those measures wind their way through the legislative process, the existing DACA program is being bolstered at the procedural and regulatory levels, Felicia Escobar Carrillo, chief of staff in the office of the director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, said during a recent webinar.

We are actually working to fortify and preserve DACA as directed by a presidential memo that was signed on Jan. 20, she said.

One aspect of the program that needs to be addressed is the date of U.S. entry to be eligible, said Greg Smith, Cooperative Baptist Fellowship field personnel and co-founder of an immigrant services ministry in Fredericksburg, Va., that offers legal services.

The main difficulty with DACA today is that very few young Dreamers have been in the U.S. since June 15, 2007, which was the original and still current starting date for continuous presence a person has to prove in order to qualify for DACA.When the Obama administration first established DACA in 2012, proving continuous presence in the U.S. since 2007 wasnt that difficult.But now in 2021, it is, he said.

DACA applicants usually are relieved that the program continues to exist, Smith said, because it exists to provide some shelter from possible deportation, not to mentionproviding them with an Employment Authorization Document (work permit) so they can earn money without fearing government reprisal.

But he also is curious about long-term solutions. Something I would like to know is where Congress is in terms of making DACA, or something like it for Dreamers, permanent.

DACA recipients and their families remain vulnerable as long as such questions have to be asked, said Hector, a 29-year-old Dreamer who lives in Fredericksburg, Va.

Hector said the program has opened doors, enabling him to get a drivers license, earn a degree from Bluefield College in Virginia and land a job as a payroll compliance auditor.

For me and a lot of DACA recipients, the reason for being in DACA is to allow us to progress more and more as our goals become bigger and bigger, he said.

We want to push the administration to act more aggressively.

But there is always another obstacle, and for me and other recipients right now that obstacle is citizenship, Hector added. We want to push the administration to act more aggressively.

In Austin, Torres agreed the sense of urgency he and other Dreamers feel about the pace of the White House and Congress on immigration reform stems from the blessing DACA has been to them and their families.

Torres, who is studying for the Texas bar exam and hopes to become a prosecutor, said he doesnt want to return to the fear that plagued him throughout his childhood.

I was fully aware of my illegal status even at the age of 4 because crossing the border with your parents while the Border Patrol is chasing you makes you fully aware, he said. I have always lived in fear because I knew we didnt have the legal status to be here, so into my teenage years it was always a concern.

The fears resurfaced for a time when former President Donald Trump attempted to end the DACA program. His efforts were overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2020.

Hence, Torres and other Dreamers are doing what they can to share their stories and to urge the White House to drive harder for the codification of DACA and other immigrant protections.

Our main concern is that the whole immigration issue is going to be placed on the back burner like it was under the Obama administration, or that President Biden and congressional Democrats are not going to push hard enough for an immigration deal, Torres said.

Related articles:

Biden administration rushing to strengthen DACA, official says

A bipartisan immigration bill has been introduced, but will it garner bipartisan support?

Panelists debate how to normalize immigration after ill effects of Trumpism

What would happen if immigration policies were based on majority opinion in the U.S.?

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Dreamers want White House and Congress to do more for their protection - Baptist News Global

Senator Markey on GOP Filibuster of Jan. 6 Commission: This Is Why We Must Abolish the Filibuster – Ed Markey

Washington (May 28, 2021) U.S. Senator Edward J. Markey(D-Mass.) released the following statement today after Senate Republicansoverwhelmingly voted to oppose debate on the bipartisan January 6thCommission.

The U.S. Capitol and our very democracy came under attackon January 6, and instead of committing to an investigation of how and why itoccurred, Senate Republicans balked, saidSenator Markey. Police officers lost their lives, security was compromised,the Vice President could have been killed, but Republicans would rather embracethe Big Lie than get to the real truth. It is crystal clear that the vastmajority of Senate Republicans are unwilling to try and legislate in good faithon anything of importance to the American people. Unless we abolish thefilibuster, there will be no progress on any agenda focused on justice,fairness, or basic survival.

Leader McConnell is engaging in the same obstructionisttactics he used under the Obama administration to stop progress in ourcountry, continued Senator Markey. Wehave seen this movie before, but this time we must write a different ending andfinally rid our system of the Jim Crow vestige that is the filibuster. TheAmerican people are crying out for action on a range of life-saving issues:climate action to meet the scope and scale of the crisis we face, protectingand expanding voting rights across America, closing background check loopholes,passingcomprehensive immigration reform, and improving our health caresystem. Protecting the filibuster is protecting the broken status quo, and wecannot allow that to happen any longer.

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Senator Markey on GOP Filibuster of Jan. 6 Commission: This Is Why We Must Abolish the Filibuster - Ed Markey

Uncertain futures: experiences of DACA recipient and undocumented students – KGUN

TUCSON, Ariz. (KGUN) "I came to the United States when I was very small so I can't remember exactly how old I was."

Denisse Amezquita said her parents brought here legally when she was around three years old.

"So a tourist visa we came in with a visa already on us," she said.

Diana Ojeda was also brought to the States using a Visa.

"My mom brought me actually using her friend's baby's visa."

Both are undergraduates hoping to become attorneys.

Denisse said she may never see her grandmother again.

"If the time comes where she does pass away I wouldn't be able to go visit her funeral."

She is a DACA recipient.

Diana said she's currently undocumented but pursuing DACA status herself.

"If anything happens our family is definitely split," said Jesus Lucero.

Lucero said they're undocumented, brought to the country when they were four.

"My dad has been picked up by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), my younger brother has been a target of Customs and Border Protection in the past."

Jesus said their family has endured tough days during the Trump presidency.

"During the pandemic, right around mother's day...when my brothers DACA had expired, (they) threaten to arrest him again."

"Sleepless nights for me and my parents," Amezquita said.

This group of undergrads are among the 400,000 reported to be undocumented or under some migrant status studying in the country today.

Working toward their goals under a shadow of constant fear, for Denisse, fear that her parents could be sent away.

"One day if they were to be deported, you know I would be the head of the household, and trying to figure out how to pay bills, how to do college, how to raise my younger sibling, take care of my grandmother."

She said right now she can't even get work.

"Trying to get a job where it doesn't require to look at my Social (Security Number)."

Diana said can't make a living either.

"I don't drive and can't work."

A situation, she said, she would change if she could.

Jesus said their own fate rests in the hands of immigration courts.

"The only hope we have is that the wait list gets shortened, that processing times shrink."

As students, they have one other hope, Scholarships A-Z.

"We're connecting you to the resources that do exist and helping them create a plan."

A plan, Dario Andrade Mendoza said, will help them achieve, at the very least, their educational aspirations.

Dario said as more of their members become professionals, in Denisse and Diana's case, attorneys, it grows their community.

"(They) will actually create a path that then we are able to guide others, future students," Andrade Mendoza said.

Denisse, Diana and Jesus all said they hope to see some measure of immigration reform that provides a path for them to become citizens.

"Just like with daca, we didn't imagine that it was going to be reinstated and all the sudden it was, so anything can happen we just have to keep our hopes up." Denisse said.

They say one administration may or may not make things more difficult

"I just hope that the Biden administration helps get the act together," Ojeda said.

They all say they've learned they'll need to rely less on who is President and more so on each other and their own wills to get by.

"My goal isn't necessarily to adjust my status, it's for the government to adjust how they see us, because I don't think there's anything wrong with me," Jesus said.

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Uncertain futures: experiences of DACA recipient and undocumented students - KGUN