The White House is requesting billions of dollars from Congress on Tuesday to help with the ongoing crisis at the southwestern border of the country.
The appeal tacks-on additional funds to the multi-billion-dollar proposal unveiled by President Barack Obama last week, with a total of $3.7 billion for heightened border enforcement, immigration judges, attorneys, asylum officials, and resources for U.S. Border Patrol agents. The proposal had previously urged Congress to expand the Obama administration’s authority to speed up deportation proceedings for the thousands of unaccompanied minors at the border, but the White House backed down late Monday after facing opposition from human rights groups.
While it remains uncertain whether the White House will bring up the deportation proposal separately, officials made clear that the administration intends on returning the bulk of the children back to their home countries.
“While we will observe due process rights and observe humanitarian considerations, people will be returned to the region,” a White House official told reporters Tuesday. “Children who do not qualify for humanitarian relief will be returned.”
But human rights and refugee groups have raised grave concerns that expediting the due process rights of these children would trigger a number of problems. A 2008 law enacted under former President George W. Bush bolstered protections for young children who traveled to America from countries that do not border the United States. Advocates fear that rolling back those protections could lead to sending children back into harm’s way when they could potentially qualify for asylum status.
A number of lawmakers, however, are anxious to process the children as quickly as possible and return them to their home countries in hope that mass deportations will deter other children from attempting the dangerous journey North in the future.
The Obama administration has been scrambling to cope with the influx of unaccompanied minors. More than 52,000 unaccompanied migrant children have fled Central American countries since October, walking alone across the U.S.-Mexican border.









