The Daily - A Big Policy Change at the Border
Episode Date: May 9, 2023For the past three years, the United States has relied on Title 42, a pandemic restriction that has allowed the swift expulsion of many migrants at the southern border. But by the end of the week, tha...t rule will expire.Miriam Jordan, who covers immigration for The Times, explains what that will mean on both sides of the border.Guest: Miriam Jordan, a national correspondent covering immigration for The New York Times.Background reading: An end to pandemic restrictions could bring thousands to the border.President Biden has used his executive authority to significantly expand the number of legal immigrants entering the U.S.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, for the past three years,
the United States has relied on an emergency health rule
to solve its immigration problems at the U.S.-Mexico border.
By the end of the week, that rule will expire.
My colleague, Miriam Jordan,
has been reporting on what that will mean
for those on both sides of the border.
It's Tuesday, May 9th.
Miriam, I wonder if you can walk us through precisely what's happening at the border on Thursday. 9.59 p.m. Eastern Time, the Biden administration is lifting an emergency health rule that has been used to prevent hundreds of thousands of migrants, many of them seeking asylum, from entering the United States.
That rule is called Title 42.
And we've talked about Title 42 a lot on this show, but just explain where Title 42 comes from and what exactly it has done. Well, Title 42 was imposed three years ago by President Trump under the premise of preventing the spread of COVID-19 to the American public.
public. But it was essentially used as a border control tool because, quite simply, it has allowed U.S. border officials to very quickly turn away most migrants who show up trying to enter the
United States. No hearing, no chance to ask for asylum, nothing. They're literally expelled within
minutes. Which is not the normal situation. Exactly. This replaced the previous
system that critics sometimes labeled catch and release because migrants were able to turn
themselves in to border patrol agents, say that they wanted asylum, and then were allowed to wait in the United States for the outcome of their immigration case
for years. And they might never leave. Right. It was a system whereby, in the crudest possible
terms, if you came to the U.S. and asked for asylum, it was a way of staying in the U.S. for
quite some time. Yes, that is correct.
Asylum doesn't happen overnight.
Applicants have to wait for years for their cases to resolve in court.
The reality on the ground that that system generated became very frustrating, particularly to Republicans and the administration of Donald Trump.
And that triggered a major change in policy.
And that policy change was to block asylum seekers from entering the United States
using Title 42 and the health emergency rationale of the pandemic.
Correct.
You know, people from many countries who touch U.S. soil
and turn themselves in to the Border Patrol or were apprehended by agents were now swiftly expelled back to Mexico or placed on deportation flights back to their home countries.
And, you know, obviously, the pandemic emergency has ended.
So there's no justification for keeping this policy in place.
So there's no justification for keeping this policy in place.
Miriam, what does it look like at the border right now as this emergency policy, Title 42, that really served as a message to those seeking asylum that they shouldn't come to the border because the old rules weren't going to apply?
What does it look like as that now ends?
Well, I guess it's mayhem.
Tonight, the scenes of pure desperation growing on the border,
waves of migrants surging across the Rio Grande River into the U.S.
We've seen a substantial increase in the number of migrants trying to cross into the United States ahead of this policy shift.
A large crowd of migrants are gathering at the U.S. southern border with Mexico.
They're waiting to be apprehended.
And we've also seen very large numbers of migrants amassing in border cities on the Mexican side.
Migrants grasping for what food and supplies they can get through the border wall in El Paso.
With hopes of crossing after the policy sunsets.
The new group of migrants are doing what they can
to stay warm as they wait for what is sometimes
hours to be processed.
There's confusion.
Some people think it will become more difficult
to enter the U.S., so they want to come
as soon as possible before 11.59 p.m. on Thursday.
Many others think it's going to become easier afterwards.
Border towns are already stretched, El Paso declaring a state of emergency,
saying 1,350 migrants arrive there every day already.
Outside a church in downtown El Paso last week, there are about 2,000 migrants who had recently managed to cross the border,
sleeping on the sidewalk on these collapsed cardboard boxes.
You know, some children were begging.
Migrants were trying to figure out how they were going to get to their destinations across the country.
It was really sad.
This young woman who came to the U.S. saying there are many more coming, trying to escape violence and economic collapse back home.
So some of the migrants who are now massing at the border think that the end of Title 42 means it's going to be harder to get into the U.S. for them. Others think when Title 42 expires, it's going to be easier.
So which side of this argument is right?
likely to get harder because the Biden administration sees the end of Title 42 as an opportunity to make some pretty significant changes to how asylum works. And those changes
could mean that large numbers of migrants seeking asylum will no longer be able to do so at the border.
And the reason the Biden administration wants to do that is really because we have an unprecedented
number of people from around the world seeking entry into the United States. It's Russians
trying to evade conscription as the war with Ukraine rages.
It's Afghans trying to escape the Taliban.
It's Venezuelans, Haitians, Cubans, Colombians, Nicaraguans,
who are coming from countries whose economies have been ravaged by COVID.
And all those people that you just described, they're coming through Mexico, correct?
And almost all of them see this previous system of asylum in the U.S., the one that was in place before Title 42, as their best path into the United States.
Right.
And the reality is that long before Title 42 was put in place, the system was just not equipped to handle this number of people applying for asylum.
The system has been completely buckling.
So many people apply that there's often a five-year backlog until a case comes to completion.
That's in part because it's not just people who qualify for asylum applying for it.
There are also people taking advantage of the system.
People who know they won't qualify still apply
because they know that they can stay in the country
at least for the number of years it takes for their case to move through the system.
And the result of all this is that the system doesn't function
as a working immigration policy. So what exactly is the Biden administration's plan now that Title
42 is going away to change the way asylum works and to avoid this crush of people at the border?
Well, actually, the Biden administration has come up with two ways to try
to discourage people from coming to the U.S.-Mexico border. The first is legal pathways for people
to avoid making their journey altogether. And the second is actually making it harder for them
to get in if they come to the border. Okay, let's start with the first, the idea of new
legal pathways that might prevent people from making this dangerous trek to the U.S.-Mexico border? What is that plan? Well, it's a patchwork of programs.
The first one, called humanitarian parole, enables people from four countries, including Venezuela,
Haiti, Cuba, and Nicaragua, to fly directly to the U.S. rather than come to the border,
to the U.S. rather than come to the border, provided they have a financial sponsor in the United States that commits to receiving them. That alleviates pressure from the border.
Secondly, the administration recently announced that it will be setting up regional centers for people to apply for refugee status in Colombia,
Guatemala, and potentially other countries. Again, that would prevent people from coming
all the way to the border. Right. In other words, seek your entry into the U.S. long before you get to the U.S.-Mexico border.
Precisely. And lastly, the administration unveiled a mobile app that enables migrants who are in Mexico to apply for an appointment for an interview with an immigration officer at the border.
Many of these migrants would normally come to the border and turn themselves in,
but the app is designed to create some order in the process, even if they're already in Mexico,
having left their countries in South America or Asia.
Got it.
So the message embedded in all three of these plans is there are ways of trying to get into
the country that don't require you to come to the border, and please don't come to the
border.
Exactly.
But for migrants who are trying to reach the U.S., there are problems with all of these
alternatives.
Such as? there are problems with all of these alternatives.
Such as?
Well, the problem with the humanitarian parole program is that many of these migrants don't have family or friends
with means in the United States to take responsibility for supporting them.
The regional centers haven't yet been established,
and it's not clear when they would be up and running.
The mobile app has problems.
It offers a very limited number of appointments.
Those appointments fill up very quickly, almost instantly, and the app favors people who have good Internet connection.
The app favors people who have good internet connection.
I've talked to migrants who say that it crashes when they finally get on,
or it doesn't accept the information they upload.
So some of these alternative means of applying to come to the U.S.
are either a work in progress or not in place really at all at this point.
Right.
But the main problem the Biden administration is facing right now is that on top of all that, there are already tens of thousands of people amassed on the Mexican side
of the border, and they're still going to try to get in in a way that the government really
doesn't want them to try.
We'll be right back.
So Miriam, what's going to happen to all these people who have done what the U.S. government doesn't want them to do, which is come to the border seeking asylum?
Right. So that brings us to the second set of rules that will go into effect.
The first set was designed to discourage people from coming to the border altogether. The second set is designed to make
it harder to get in if you come to the border. And make it harder how, once you're at the border?
So when Title 42 lifts, to be eligible for asylum in the United States, if you pass through another country to arrive here, such as Mexico, you must have applied for asylum in that other country first and been denied there.
denied asylum in another country. So for someone coming from, say, Guatemala, for example,
Mexico, which is a stop along the way from Guatemala to the U.S., would have had to deny them asylum. And the U.S. cannot be the first place that this person tries to immigrate.
Right. And so when Title 42 goes away and you arrive at the U.S. border and request asylum, the key question
to determine whether you're eligible to enter the country is going to be, have you applied for asylum
in another country on the way here like you're supposed to? And if you haven't, if everything goes according to this new plan, you would be
arrested, processed, and quickly deported. So by making it so hard to ever get to the point where
you can apply for asylum, by creating all these hoops to jump through, it would really seem like the Biden administration in this moment is going a long way toward effectively eliminating asylum.
Is that right?
Well, it may look that way, but there are some very notable exceptions that mean that is not the case.
And what are those? For one, Mexicans who come to the border do not pass
through another country on their way to the United States. And there are more than 200,000
internally displaced Mexicans who would like to seek asylum in the United States,
according to independent estimates. Got it. So this policy won't really apply to them.
Correct. Then there are families with young children. Under the Biden administration,
the United States does not detain families. It typically allows them into the country
after processing them at the border. The reason for that is that technically,
kids aren't supposed to be detained for more than a few days.
And every time a president has tried to find an alternative other than just letting families in,
whether it be separating parents and kids or detaining them altogether, it's drawn ferocious criticism.
Right. As President Trump learned when he tried to separate migrant families,
children from their parents. Correct. So if a family shows up at the border, the U.S. is very
likely to allow them into the country after processing them. And finally, there's one more exception. Individuals who come from countries with which the United States does not have good relations, such as Russia, making it almost impossible to put them on deportation planes back to where they came from.
Got it. So, Miriam, in all,
how many people are we talking about
who would fit into one of these categories of exceptions
to the Biden administration's plan
to discourage people from coming to the border
to seek asylum?
Well, altogether,
we could have hundreds of thousands of people
who are still let in, which is problematic
to the Biden administration's intentions because it sends a mixed message to potential migrants.
Right. The message being, on the one hand, we're telling you don't come to the border,
don't come to the border, don't come to the border. On the other hand, we're saying,
well, you can come to the border and you't come to the border, don't come to the border. On the other hand, we're saying, well, you can come to the border and you can come to the border.
And that gets messy.
Exactly.
And let's not forget that there's a very sophisticated smuggling network out there that uses these mixed messages to convince would-be clients that entry to the United States is virtually guaranteed.
So Miriam, this conversation is ending in a place I hadn't quite expected it to,
because we started this conversation with the Biden administration
who resolved to replace Title 42 with a new system
that discouraged people from heading to the U.S.-Mexico border to seek asylum.
people from heading to the U.S.-Mexico border to seek asylum, and yet the first part of the plan is in various stages of not quite readiness or are kind of buggy, and therefore people are still
going to come to the border. And then the second part has so many exceptions that it won't do a
ton of work to discourage all that many people. So is this going to do what the Biden administration hopes it's going to do,
which is signal that people don't come to the border?
Yeah, Michael, I think we're in this kind of strange position.
A lot of advocates are very upset about the new asylum restrictions.
They regard them as cruel and a violation of U.S. commitment to being a safe haven for those seeking refuge.
But the reality is that the nature of what the Biden administration is seeking to do leaves plenty of confusion and hope.
So migrants will continue to come to the border because they are aware that there is a chance that they will make it into the country. So the long and short of this is that if the Biden administration hoped that this new replacement
for Title 42 would end these painful scenes of people massing at the border trying to
get in, that is not what's likely to happen anytime soon.
That's right, because there's so many people waiting on the other side of the border as we speak
to enter the United States,
and they're not going to turn around
and retrace their journey from Afghanistan
or from Venezuela once they've gotten so close.
So Miriam, this doesn't really seem like a foolproof plan
from the Biden administration.
And I wonder why this is the best that it can do.
And I ask that very mindful
that President Biden is now officially running for re-election
against Republicans, including Donald Trump,
who are very, very focused on the issue of the border?
Well, the Biden administration has been trying to use its executive authority to address this
intractable problem. We have masses of people who want to come to the United States to rebuild their lives.
But ultimately, any real solution has to come out of Congress
because our immigration system is broken.
We've had this policy for three years that's been used to sort of hold the line.
But, you know, Congress is responsible for immigration legislation.
And we know that immigration has been a political non-starter because the Republicans and Democrats are so polarized on this issue.
So what you end up with is a president with this hot potato in his hands
trying to come up with solutions.
And these solutions are a hodgepodge that no one is happy with
because ultimately they aren't going to stop people from coming to the border.
Well, Miriam, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Thank you so much for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Monday, after a two-week civil trial,
a jury in Manhattan will now decide whether former President Donald Trump is guilty of battery and defamation stemming from allegations
that he raped a woman in the 1990s. That woman, E. Jean Carroll, accused Trump of sexually
assaulting her in a department store dressing room. If found liable, Trump may be forced to
pay financial damages and retract statements that he's made
mocking both Carol and her claims.
And
officials tell the Washington Post
that the gunman who killed eight people
at a mall in Texas over the weekend
was briefly enlisted in the U.S. Army
but was discharged over a mental health condition.
The shooter's motive remains unclear, but police are examining online posts in which the shooter expressed hate towards
women and Black people. The rampage was the 199th mass shooting in the U.S. since the start of the year. Today's episode was produced by
Claire Tedeschetter, Nina Feldman, and Luke Vanderplug, with help from Carlos Prieto.
It was edited by M.J. Davis-Lynn, with help from Patricia Willans and Mark George,
contains original music by Marion Lozano and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
Special thanks to Natalie Kittrow, Michael Shear, and Eileen Sullivan.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.