Trump is killing temporary refugee program, or
is he?
by Ann Corcoran 5/13/18
“I think we should fold all of the TPS people that have been here for a
considerable period of time and find a way for them to be [on] a path to citizenship.”
(White
House Chief of Staff John Kelly)
Under that approach, recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program — and potentially TPS holders — would receive a path to citizenship in exchange for border wall funding, a change from family-based to merit-based migration and cancellation of the diversity visa lottery.
Under that approach, recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program — and potentially TPS holders — would receive a path to citizenship in exchange for border wall funding, a change from family-based to merit-based migration and cancellation of the diversity visa lottery.
From
time to time over the years, I’ve reported on the ridiculously named “Temporary Protected Status ”immigration program that has allowed
many migrants (who were likely already in the country illegally from
TPS-designated countries) to stay in the US and work, get drivers licenses and
probably thus vote! (Designated usually in the wake of a now long
forgotten natural disaster.)
As The Hill reports,
the Trump Administration is ordering that most (some of whom have been here for
nearly 2 decades) begin to pack their bags.
But here we learn it is all apparently part of the ‘art of the deal,’
and that perhaps the administration will find them and the ‘Dreamers’ a path to
citizenship if they get a few things, including the wall, but only if Congress
actually passes a law—a comprehensive bill (ugh! it’s back!).
Can’t
we for once address each immigration program on its merits or demerits! And are
we really going to give legal status to hundreds of thousands who are here
illegally?
From The Hill: Trump close to wiping out TPS
program for immigrants. With the end of Temporary Protected
Status (TPS) for 56,000 Hondurans earlier this month, the nearly 30-year-old
immigration program is essentially dead.
TPS
had survived under several Republican and Democratic administrations, which
mainly used the program as a pressure valve to allow Central American and
Caribbean immigrants to live and work in the United States, often sending remittances home.
These
remittances are huge and I remember when I first heard GW Bush extend TPS for
El Salvadorans, the remark was made that we were propping up El Salvador
because we permitted all those TPS workers here to send money ‘home.’ Of
course that is money lost to the US economy!
But the Trump administration says the program has been abused, allowing
people to stay in the United States long after crisis conditions have ended in
their home countries. [Every 18 months TPS has been extended for many
countries.—ed]
The Trump administration has ordered the end of TPS for more than
300,000 immigrants. The Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) has so far ordered the end of TPS benefits to all but about 7,000 people
from four countries, nearly booting the entire TPS population.
Under
the program, immigrants from countries that have suffered a natural or man-made
disaster are allowed to live and work in the United States while their home
country recovers.
Previous
administrations interpreted TPS rules to allow beneficiaries to stay in the
United States as long as their return would impose a significant burden on
their home countries. But the Trump administration has used a stricter
interpretation, ending TPS based on countries’ recovery from the original
disaster that triggered their designation.
The
move has left hundreds of thousands of Caribbean and Central American TPS
recipients in limbo, with many searching for a way to stay in the United States
with their families.
Don’t get too excited that the program will end….The Hill story
continues: Why is Kelly out floating the “four
pillars” this week? White House chief of staff John Kelly introduced the Trump
administration’s stricter interpretation of the TPS statute when he became DHS
secretary in 2017. He put the onus on Congress to help the TPS recipients,
telling lawmakers they should change the laws they don’t like.
In an NPR interview Thursday, Kelly explicitly said for the first time
that longtime TPS holders should be given a path to citizenship.
“I
think we should fold all of the TPS people that have been here for a
considerable period of time and find a way for them to be [on] a path to
citizenship,” he said.
In his NPR interview, Kelly promoted the “four pillars” approach
suggested by the White House in immigration negotiations earlier this year.
“Right
now, I would like to see legislatively the four pillars enacted,” Kelly said.
There
is much more here at The Hill. See all of my previous posts on TPS
by clicking here. Let the President know what you think! Link to the White
House comment page is in the upper right hand side bar here at RRW.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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