Immigration and human rights advocates are expressing outrage over President Obama’s proposal for Congress to speed up deportations of child migrants caught at the U.S. border.
“This administration is throwing these kids under the bus and returning them to countries where their lives may be at risk,” Wendy Young of Kids In Need of Defense, an advocacy group for unaccompanied minors, told msnbc. “They’re hitting the panic button way too soon.”
Obama on Monday formally requested a $2 billion infusion to help cope with the unprecedented number of kids caught at the southwestern border. In a letter to leaders on Capitol Hill, the president urged Congress to expand the Department of Homeland Security’s authority with “an aggressive deterrence strategy focused on the removal and repatriation of recent border crossers.”
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The proposal would unravel a bipartisan provision adopted under President George W. Bush that protected children fleeing countries that do not share borders with the U.S. Children traveling from countries other than Mexico or Canada are currently exempt from expedited removal screenings and are given asylum hearings. The administration is asking for that to change.
If the proposal is enacted, Border Patrol agents would be tasked with screening children after they’re arrested along the border. The interview would effectively give children one shot at convincing officials that they have legitimate concerns for their safety and should remain in the U.S. to go through immigration and asylum proceedings.
Advocates warn that the streamlined screenings will not adequately address the children’s needs, and that Border Patrol agents — unlike legal experts and social service providers — are ill-prepared to evaluate whether children have grounds for seeking legal status in the U.S.
“They’re not child-appropriate and they’re not child-friendly,” Melysa Sperber, director of the advocacy group Alliance to End Slavery and Trafficking, told reporters Monday.
President Obama’s proposal signals that the administration is now viewing the border crisis as an immigration issue rather than as a refugee emergency.
By speeding up deportations for migrant children, the administration is trying to squash inaccurate rumors that young people making the journey into the U.S. illegally would qualify for the same status provisions temporarily granted to so-called DREAMers (kids brought to the U.S. illegally by their parents). Republicans in recent weeks have blamed that miscommunication on the Obama administration, arguing its policies have become a magnet for young people wanting to start a new life in the U.S.
“The journey is unbelievably dangerous for these kids. The children who are fortunate enough to survive it will be taken care of while they go through the legal process but in most cases that process will lead to them being sent back home,” Obama said Monday from the Rose Garden. “I’ve sent a clear message to the parents in these countries not to put these kids through this.”
“The problem is that our system is so broken, so unclear that folks don’t know what the rules are,” he said.
The president’s move baffled many advocacy groups, who view it as appeasing conservative calls to ramp up deportations. The proposal would put many lawmakers — particularly congressional Democrats — in a difficult place politically. Not only would it put lawmakers on record as voting to deport thousands of children who are traveling alone, but it could also turn away kids who potentially have legitimate claims for asylum.









