Biden, forced to enforce law authorizing immediate deportation of migrants

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The United States Supreme Court is considering Texas, Arizona and Virginia’s request to uphold it as a precautionary measure

Thousands of people waited on the Mexican side of the US border for the application of Title 42 of a public health law that Donald Trump used to expedite the swift deportation of those who entered the country illegally to expire, but that won’t happen tomorrow.

The trip was cut short by a precautionary order from Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, who decided Monday evening to grant the urgent request from the states of Texas, Arizona and Virginia.

“No one can reasonably dispute that the absence of that precautionary order would create a crisis of unprecedented proportions at the border,” they argued. “The idea that states will not be irreparably harmed as a result of the impending catastrophe that the termination of Title 42 will bring is therefore a fantasy.”

Judge Roberts agreed. Joe Biden’s administration had until Tuesday afternoon to prove otherwise, but all indications are that the full court will accept the case, delaying settlement until the summer. The federal government is between a rock and a hard place.

On the one hand, Biden campaigned promising to end this policy, which uses the excuse of the pandemic to control the flow of immigrants without granting their requests for political asylum. On the other hand, its cancellation at a time of record numbers predicted it could meet up to 18,000 emigrants crossing the border illegally as of this Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security estimated.

The crisis was so great that El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser, a Democrat, declared a state of emergency early Saturday. The Texan city has been overwhelmed for months, with Governor Greg Abbott sending undocumented migrants on buses to the northeast of the country.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) believes that Supreme Court justices, with a conservative majority, should deny the states’ request because it is clear they are trying to use a public health law for immigration purposes. Instead, the government should address the problem with specific policies that it implements “in a humane way,” its president, Lee Gelernt, said.

Title 42 allows immediate removal, but not deportation, so immigrants often wait in the dangerous border strip until the next opportunity to cross. “That doesn’t mean the doors are open,” protested White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre. “Anyone who crosses illegally will be punished.” That’s not what those heading to the Rio Grande hear, where, they’ve been told, the American dream begins. FINISH

Source: La Verdad

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