Thursday, May 11, 2023

The gathering storm around Title 42

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May 11, 2023 View in browser
 
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By Katherine Long

Presented by Shut Down SHEIN

Migrants walk toward a waiting bus at a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint today in Yuma, Ariz.

Migrants walk toward a waiting bus at a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint today in Yuma, Ariz. | Randy Hoeft//The Yuma Sun via AP

END GAME — At 11:59 tonight, Title 42 — the Covid-era emergency action to quickly expel migrants from the United States — will lapse, leading to the likely influx of thousands of asylum-seekers along the U.S.-Mexico border.

It has all the elements of a humanitarian crisis — and a political one as well.

Many of these potential migrants, already expelled under Title 42, have been living in border towns in Mexico, subjected to consistent human rights abuses including kidnapping, rape and other violent attacks.

So as Title 42 lapses, some plan to take their chances in America, even as strict border controls — including Title 8, which can carry the potential of prosecution and a five-year ban from the U.S. — remain in place. The most recent Customs and Border Protection data cited 206,239 encounters at the southern border in November 2022, a high that hasn’t been matched in over 20 years.

President Joe Biden is desperate to keep the situation from spinning out of control. The Pentagon announced that it would temporarily send 1,500 additional troops to the border, and his administration announced new rules this week that would blanket deny asylum to migrants who haven’t first either applied online or seeked protection in another country they passed through. The regulations are likely to face legal challenges and have some immigration activists and lawmakers concerned that Biden is parroting former President Donald Trump’s harsh immigration penalties.

It’s added up to very few people happy with Biden’s handling of the situation thus far — only 26 percent of Americans said they approved of Biden’s handling of immigration in a new poll from Reuters/Ipsos. The weeks to come could serve as a defining moment for Biden’s reelection chances; Republicans have already seized on his weakness in the area, heckling him about his immigration comments at the State of the Union and employing messaging that argues his “border crisis is the worst in American history.”

If the current moment spirals out of control, Biden could watch his approval ratings tumble further, something he can ill afford as he ramps up his bid for a second term. To get a better sense of what the end of Title 42 means for immigration policy — and how the Biden administration’s plan affects the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border — Nightly spoke with Muzaffar Chishti, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, a think tank that provides analysis on international migration trends. This interview has been edited.

What were the specific intentions of Title 42, and what will happen now that it’s expiring?

Title 42 basically was intended to sort of expel everyone at the border. We don’t even have to do a hearing, we don’t even have to create a record, just push everyone out. And frankly today, Title 42 exists mostly as a talking point, both for the right and the left. Because by now, there are so many exemptions to Title 42 that in December of last year, only 20 percent of people were subject to Title 42. So it has kind of lost its relevance. Under Title 42, there was no place for treating people under asylum, which is why it had become so important. So after Title 42 we will be back to square one, which is Title 8.

The backlog for immigration cases has stretched to 7 years. So the backlog has become a magnet for unauthorized migration. People were just showing up and asking for asylum, absolutely sure that they would not get a hearing for 7 years, during which time they would just stay here. And so that became a pull factor. The administration is trying to move us away from that factor.

How does Biden’s new immigration policy proposal compare to Trump-era immigration reforms?

So there were two policies announced on January 1, and it’s somewhat connected but different. The first one was to offer up parole possibilities to nationals of the countries. And if you look at the combined, this is Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuelans. They were picked for this special relief because they were four of the largest nationality groups who had come to the border in the last few years. The second component issued that day says “look, we are going to have a new regime at the southern border going forward,” and this will principally be in place of Title 42. They’re preparing for what they expect to be large flows of people coming in with the expiration of Title 42. They have concluded that the last two years have been an error of disorderly migration at the border, if not chaotic, that 2.4 million people came to the border. The highest in history. Both the optics and the reality of that are no longer sustainable.

What they want to do is they want to incentivize people coming in an orderly way to the port of entry, and disincentivize people from coming between borders in an irregular manner. What they’ve done is say “look, if you’ve come between the ports of entry in an unauthorized way, we will presume you’re not eligible for asylum if you come to our transit country and then apply there.” That’s what advocates have called the same as Trump policies, because Trump had imposed a transit country ban. But that is where the comparison ends, there was a transit country ban under Trump but it’s very different. It’s not a total ban, we are not imposing the transit country rule at the port of entry.

Do you think that there’s any possibility in the near future that immigration policy will revert back to pre-Covid policies?

The levels of legal immigration have reached what we had from 2000 to 2016. That’s for sure. We reached a record number of nationalizations last year, so things are healing. Title 42 was clearly a glaring aberration in that. What has been different in the last two years is that, because of the record number of arrivals at the border, we had 2.4 million people come in last year, both the scale and the diversity of nationalities coming to the border was radically different in the last few years than it was pre-Trump and pre-pandemic. Five years ago, border crossings were mostly Mexican single men. Indeed, our policies, our resources, our infrastructure was built for that challenge. Now that reality has totally changed. Not only are the numbers high, but the numbers are increasingly non-Mexican, non-Central Americans. Mexico has become the staging ground for the immigrants from all parts of the world trying to get to the U.S. quickly. And families have become the dominant part. So you can’t have the same policies.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at klong@politico.com or on Twitter at @katherinealong.

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— Feinstein’s return fails to unstick controversial judicial nominee: Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) showed up late to a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting today, missing the panel’s first votes on judges since her heavily scrutinized return and causing a bit of a jumble as senators shuffled the agenda to accommodate her. And despite Democrats’ growing irritation during the 89-year-old senator’s absence over the need to delay certain judicial nominees, her presence wasn’t enough to unstick the nomination of Michael Delaney to the First Circuit, a controversial nominee who has been punted for weeks and wasn’t addressed by the panel today.

— Biden chief economist pick Bernstein moves toward Senate confirmation: Biden’s pick for chief economist, Jared Bernstein, is one step closer to Senate confirmation to a post that will be key to White House efforts to steer the economy away from recession. Bernstein cleared the Senate Banking Committee in a 12-11 vote today, putting him on track to lead the White House Council of Economic Advisers at a time when Biden is running for reelection, growth is slowing and inflation remains persistently high.

— Under fire, CIA moves to overhaul its handling of sexual assault: The CIA is hiring an expert on sexual assault prevention and announcing a number of new other steps as it attempts to address allegations of mishandling sexual assault and misconduct in its workforce. To lead its Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office, the agency has hired Taleeta Jackson, a psychologist who most recently oversaw the U.S. Navy’s sexual assault prevention program for more than 70 of its installations.

 

GET READY FOR GLOBAL TECH DAY: Join POLITICO Live as we launch our first Global Tech Day alongside London Tech Week on Thursday, June 15. Register now for continuing updates and to be a part of this momentous and program-packed day! From the blockchain, to AI, and autonomous vehicles, technology is changing how power is exercised around the world, so who will write the rules? REGISTER HERE.

 
 
Nightly Road to 2024

Donald Trump

Former President Donald Trump at a town hall with New Hampshire voters moderated by CNN's Kaitlan Collins. | CNN

TOWN HALL FALLOUT — Trump’s newsmaking CNN town hall on Wednesday evening has his Republican rivals hitting back at him and CNN’s boss under fire from his employees for holding the event in the first place.

Never Back Down, the Super PAC backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, live tweeted the event and circulated a CNN clip from a focus group that listened to the town hall that they titled “Watch Trump supporters at Trump’s townhall say he’s stuck in the past.”

Meanwhile, Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie called Trump a “coward” and a “puppet of Putin” for refusing to say that Ukraine should win in its war against Russia.

Republican presidential hopefuls and lawmakers alike will likely get questions about the contents of the town hall for the foreseeable future, including his comments that he was “inclined” to pardon “many” of the Jan. 6 rioters and his belief that congressional Republicans should allow the nation to default if they don’t get the spending cuts they want.

At CNN, employees are lambasting the network for its town hall Trump. “It was a complete disaster,” one CNN employee told POLITICO Playbook. CNN CEO Chris Licht, in an internal call with employees this morning, defended the decision to host the town hall and congratulated moderator Kaitlan Collins for “a masterful performance.”

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

BONE DRY — The Spanish government approved measures today valued at more than €2 billion to mitigate the impact of a prolonged drought that’s clobbering the country’s agricultural sector, writes Antonia Zimmerman.

The new measures come as the country goes into campaign mode ahead of regional and municipal elections on May 28, in which the impact of the drought is set to be a key issue.

A number of other EU countries also are currently bracing for a repeat of last year’s bone-dry summer, or worse, with about a quarter of the Continent’s territory under drought warning or alert.

The vast majority of Spain’s new package, some €1.4 billion, will be used to build new water infrastructure, boost the reuse of urban waste water and reduce water tariffs for farmers.

ELEVENTH HOUR — Turkish opposition candidate Muharrem İnce announced today he was pulling out of the presidential race, in a surprise move just three days before the election, writes Nicolas Camut.

İnce’s withdrawal is set to benefit the main opposition candidate, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who is currently neck and neck with longtime President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in the polls — and it could even allow Kılıçdaroğlu to claim outright victory in the first round.

İnce, who is currently polling around 2 percent according to POLITICO’s Poll of Polls, has been diverting votes from the main opposition candidate, Kılıçdaroğlu, who is supported by a six-party coalition uniting parties from left and right against Erdoğan.

 

DON’T MISS THE POLITICO ENERGY SUMMIT: A new world energy order is emerging and America’s place in it is at a critical juncture. Join POLITICO on Thursday, May 18 for our first-ever energy summit to explore how the U.S. is positioning itself in a complicated energy future. We’ll explore progress on infrastructure and climate funding dedicated to building a renewable energy economy, Biden’s environmental justice proposals, and so much more. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
Nightly Number

90 percent

The percentage of greenhouse gas pollution that fossil fuel plants must slash by a deadline of either 2035 or 2040, according to a new rule rolled out by the Biden administration today. To justify the size of those cuts, the agency says fossil fuel plants could capture their greenhouse gas emissions before they hit the atmosphere — a long-debated technology that no power plant in the U.S. uses now.

RADAR SWEEP

INFECTED — In Bulgaria in the 1980s — amidst hyperinflation, food rationing and daily blackouts — young people were churning out arguably the country’s most impactful export: computer viruses. Young Bulgarian programmers were dispatching these viruses to computers across Europe and the United States. One of them, a man named Teodor Prevalsky, created one that became the most dangerous virus in history. Scott J. Shapiro took a deep dive for the Guardian into Prevalsky, Bulgaria in the 80s and how and why one virus spread so far.

Parting Image

On this date in 1973: Daniel Ellsberg embraces his wife Pat as they emerge from the federal building in Los Angeles shortly after the trial judge in the Pentagon Papers case dismissed all espionage, theft and conspiracy charges against Ellsberg and his co-defendant, Anthony Russo. While working for the RAND corporation, Ellsberg released the Pentagon Papers, a top secret Pentagon study of U.S. government decision-making during the Vietnam War.

On this date in 1973: Daniel Ellsberg embraces his wife Pat as they emerge from the federal building in Los Angeles shortly after the trial judge in the Pentagon Papers case dismissed all espionage, theft and conspiracy charges against Ellsberg and his co-defendant, Anthony Russo. While working for the RAND corporation, Ellsberg released the Pentagon Papers, a top secret Pentagon study of U.S. government decision-making during the Vietnam War. | AP Photo

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