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    Senior Member stoptheinvaders's Avatar
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    ACLU Sues as Jeff Sessions Wins ‘Dramatic’ Drop in Migrant Asylum

    ACLU Sues as Jeff Sessions Wins ‘Dramatic’ Drop in Migrant Asylum

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    DAVID MCNEW/AFP/Getty Images7 Aug 20184The ACLU is suing Attorney General Jeff Sessions as his asylum reforms are causing a “dramatic” drop in the number of economic migrants who pass the initial credible-fear test needed to win asylum and get jobs in the United States.

    “Starting in January 2018, court findings of credible fear began to plummet,” says a reportby TRAC Reports, Inc., a non-profit based at Syracuse University which collects asylum and immigration-related data. The “dramatic change” is shown in the data, says TRAC:


    By June 2018, only 14.7 percent of the CFR [credible fear] Immigration Court decisions found the asylum seeker had a “credible fear.” This was just half the [30 percent] level that had prevailed during the last six months of 2017 …
    Unless the asylum seeker who is otherwise subject to expedited remova passes the [courtroom] CFR review, he or she is not allowed even to apply for asylum. This applies to most parents arriving with children at the southwest border. As a consequence, individuals who don’t pass these reviews are usually quickly deported back to their home countries.
    The latest results include the impact of reforms set in 2017 by Sessions, who is gradually reversing the catch-and-release policies put in place by former President Barack Obama.


    The next set of monthly data is expected to show a further large drop because of the additional asylum reforms announced by Sessions in June and July 2018. The drop may return asylum levels to the 10 percent mark set in 2013.

    In response, the ACLU has filed its lawsuit against Sessions’ June reforms on August 7, in the left-leaning federal U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia. The ACLU asked the federal courts to assume control over the Justice Department’s immigration courtrooms, saying:


    The government has now directed asylum officers to fully implement those new, illegal rules to credible fear screenings — leading to unjustified deportations of vulnerable refugees like Grace. And the guidance to asylum officers goes even further, directing them to ignore any court rulings that are inconsistent with Sessions’ new decision. That direction conflicts with the Constitution’s separation of powers principles because, as the Supreme Court explained 200 years ago, it is the courts, not executive branch officials that must ultimately decide “what the law is.”
    The flow of economic migrants into the United States was jump-started in 2010 by pro-migration policies set by deputies for President Barack Obama. Since then, roughly 500,000 poor Central American migrants have since settled in the United States, including many who were granted provisional asylum because Obama’s deputies declared they would provide asylum to people who claimed abuse by spouses or threats from gangs.


    In 2015, a judge declared that border officials must release migrants who bring children, so creating the huge “Flores” loophole and prompting a wave of child-carrying migrants.


    The resulting large population of resident migrants is attracting more migrants from Central America, including parents who wish to leave their children with illegal-immigrant relatives in the United States.


    The mass migration has delivered a huge supply of cheap labor to companies based in Democratic-run cities. For example, in 2017, the Department of Homeland Security was forced to provide 400,000 work permits to asylum-seekers. That huge number is equal to one extra migrant for every 10 Americans who turned 18 in 2017.


    Business groups, business-first Republicans, and Democrats have welcomed the cheap labor, which forces down wages for Americans.


    But President Donald Trump is working to curb the supply of wage-lowering migrant labor to business groups. This summer, business executives have complained bitterly when they are forced to compete for workers by offering higher wages. The Washington Post reported the complaints of restaurateur Steve Carb who was forced to raise wages to fill just 900 of the 1,000 open jobs at his 12 restaurants in Hilton Head:


    Dishwashers earn $13 an hour instead of the $10 they earned a couple of years ago. Line cooks are paid $15 to $18 an hour, instead of $13 to $15. Additional overtime costs mean tweaking the menu to stay profitable, from switching to smaller shrimp to raising the price of a plate of fish and chips by 30 cents.
    “The whole island is a disaster zone right now,” said Carb, president and founder of SERG Restaurant Group. “It’s been a nightmare.”
    The ACLU, Democrats and business-first Republicans — including Kansas GOP Rep. Kevin Yoder — are now working to undermine Sessions’ successful asylum reforms.


    For example, on July 25, the GOP-led House Committee on Appropriations voted to bar government officials from spending any time or money on Sessions’ reform. The vote to revive Obama’s catch-and-release policies was taken as legislators debate and vote on amendments to the 2019 spending bill. The bill will be reviewed next by the rules committee — which is controlled by House Speaker Paul Ryan — and then will be sent to the floor for a vote.


    The critical amendment was proposed by North Carolina Democrat David Price. It was passed on a voice-vote with support from committee chairman Yoder, the new chairman of the homeland defense subcommittee. All 30 GOP members of the committee voted for the final spending package, complete with the Yoder-endorsed catch-and-release language, plus three additional measures easing the flow of cheap blue-collar and white-collar labor into the United States.


    Amid growing protest, Yoder issued a vague statement on August 3 saying he would fix the catch-and-release problem he created.


    Neil Munro

    @NeilMunroDC







    Rep. Yoder outlines fix for his revival of Obama's catch & release border policies. But he & 29 GOP Reps silent on their curbing migrant-detentions, growing 2 cheap-labor visa programs, risky giveaway to 200K visa-workers in Indian w-collar outsourcing biz http://bit.ly/2Kn3IPm

    12:11 AM - Aug 3, 2018






    Yoder Admits Catch-and-Release Problem, But Hides Cheap-Labor Visas | Breitbart

    30 GOP Reps. Endorse Obama's Catch-and-Release Plan, Cheap-Labor Visas
    breitbart.com







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    The courtroom attacks on Sessions’ successful reforms are led by the ACLU’s Washington lawsuit. In an August 7 statement, the group said:


    it has long been clear that an asylum seeker fleeing persecution by someone who is not the government — like a gang, an intimate partner, or a powerful political or social group — is eligible for asylum if she can show that the government is “unable or unwilling” to protect her, meaning that the government will not provide effective protection. But Sessions now wants applicants to have to show that their government either “condoned” the violence or other harm or was “completely helpless” to stop it.
    That is not the law and never has been. But the government has now directed asylum officers to fully implement those new, illegal rules to credible fear screenings — leading to unjustified deportations of vulnerable refugees like Grace. And the guidance to asylum officers goes even further, directing them to ignore any court rulings that are inconsistent with Sessions’ new decision. That direction conflicts with the Constitution’s separation of powers principles because, as the Supreme Court explained 200 years ago, it is the courts, not executive branch officials that must ultimately decide “what the law is.”

    The lawsuit presents several plaintiffs who have fled countries where legal standards and civic societies are far below the developed levels which evolved in Europe and the United States, and it claims that federal officials have a legal duty to allow afflicted people to live in the United States. According to the Washington Post:


    The lawsuit was filed on behalf of 12 migrants from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala — eight women, one man and three children. All failed their initial “credible fear” interviews, which is one of the first steps for asylum seekers in the fast-track removal process. Two of the children and their mothers have been deported; the rest of the plaintiffs are detained in Texas and New York. None were separated from their children.
    The lead plaintiff is a Guatemalan woman who said a former partner raped her repeatedly, attacked her daughter until the younger woman suffered a miscarriage, and stole the title to their house.
    Another plaintiff, a Honduran woman, said she escaped gang members who killed her father-in-law and beat her so badly she was unable to walk. A third said her husband in El Salvador has threatened to kill her. A recently orphaned teenager said she fled El Salvador because a violent gang moved into her home after her mother died.
    “Providing shelter, safety, and a new life to the victims of persecution has long been part of our national identity, even if not always an ideal we have lived up to,” the ACLU declared in a statement, adding:


    The Trump administration’s effort to eliminate that protection betrays our values and flouts our laws. The courts must step in to stop it.
    A 2012 Gallup poll showed that 150 million poor people want to migrate to the United States. One organizer of the 1,500-person April “caravan” from Honduras to the United States border told CNN that “the caravan is just a drop in an ocean of people trying to escape violence in Central America.”


    Trump was elected in 2016 on a popular promise to ensure that immigration laws serve Americans, not foreigners or investors.


    Four million Americans turn 18 each year and begin looking for good jobs in the free market — but the government provides green cards to roughly 1 million legal immigrants and temporary work-permits to roughly 3 million foreign workers.


    The Washington-imposed economic policy of economic growth via immigration shifts wealth from young people towards older people by flooding the market with cheap foreign labor. That process spikes profits and Wall Street values by cutting salaries for manual and skilled labor offered by blue-collar and white-collar employees. The policy also drives up real estate prices, widens wealth-gaps, reduces high-tech investment, increases state and local tax burdens, hurts kids’ schools and college education, pushes Americans away from high-tech careers, and sidelines at least 5 million marginalized Americans and their families, including many who are now struggling with opioid addictions.


    The huge influx of cheap labor has helped to stall Americans’ wages since the 1970s:

    Business groups and Democrats tout polls which prod Americans to declare support for migrants or the claim that the United States is a “Nation of Immigrants.” The alternative “priority or fairness” polls — plus the 2016 election — show that voters in the polling booth put a much higher priority on helping their families, neighbors, and fellow nationals get decent jobs in a high-tech, high-immigration, low-wage economy.


    https://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2018/08/07/jeff-sessions-wins-dramatic-drop-migrant-asylum/



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  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Good Job!!! Keep up the good work, AG Sessions!!
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

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    WE HAVE FEAR IN CHICAGO AND ALL ACROSS THE COUNTRY FROM GANGS!

    SEND THEM ALL BACK...GO CLEAN UP YOUR OWN DAMN MESS!!!

    USE BUSES AND LOAD THEM FULL...NO FANCY AIRPLANE RIDES AT OUR EXPENSE!

    WE HAVE BARGES...YOU CAN FIT THOUSANDS ON THEM!

    NO ASYLUM, NO PATH TO STAY!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

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    MW
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    The ACLU, Democrats and business-first Republicans — including Kansas GOP Rep. Kevin Yoder — are now working to undermine Sessions’ successful asylum reforms.


    For example, on July 25, the GOP-led House Committee on Appropriations voted to bar government officials from spending any time or money on Sessions’ reform.
    Something that is to be expected from the ACLU, but to have Republicans actually try an stop Jeff Sessions' reforms is extremely disappointing. Just goes to show we have traitors to our nations best interest in what we like to consider our own camp (Republicans)!

    Dealing with these immigration problems is difficult enough without have to also deal with traitor Republicans in our own camp.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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    MW
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    ACLU sues Jeff Sessions over restricting asylum for victims of domestic, gang violence

    by Daniella Silva and the Associated Press/Aug. 7, 2018

    "This is a naked attempt by the Trump Administration to eviscerate our country's asylum protections," said an attorney with the ACLU.
    "
    Attorney General Jeff Sessions at a Religious Liberty Summit at the Department of Justice on July 30, 2018.Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP file

    b
    The American Civil Liberties Union sued the Trump administration on Tuesday for restricting migrants fleeing their home countries because of domestic and gang violence from being granted asylum.
    The ACLU said it had filed a federal lawsuit in Washington against Attorney General Jeff Sessions and others over policies instructing asylum officers that "in general" claims based on domestic or gang violence "will not establish the basis for asylum, refugee status or a credible or reasonable fear of persecution."

    "This is a naked attempt by the Trump administration to eviscerate our country's asylum protections," Jennifer Chang Newell, managing attorney with the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project, said in a statement announcing the lawsuit. "It's clear the administration's goal is to deny and deport as many people as possible, as quickly as possible."




    ACLU
    @ACLU

    Jeff Sessions has repeatedly attacked the integrity of asylum seekers, but he’s actually the one gaming the system.

    Here's how his new policies illegally gut asylum protections for immigrants fleeing domestic violence and gang brutality:
    5:58 PM - Aug 7, 2018



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    The suit is asking the court to declare Sessions' policies to be contrary to law and vacate them, and enter an order staying the expedited removal of the plaintiffs and allowing them the ability to be given new credible fear interviews.

    Among the plaintiffs, who were given pseudonyms in the lawsuit, is Grace, an indigenous woman from a small village in Guatemala who sought asylum after fleeing an abusive partner and his gang member sons and facing years of sexual assault, beatings and death threats, according to the ACLU. The ACLU claims Grace would have a strong claim to asylum based on legal precedent but was denied asylum after Sessions' new policy.

    The Department of Justice said in a statement Wednesday morning that most victims of such crimes do not fit the definition for asylum claims.

    "Our nation’s immigration laws provide for asylum to be granted to individuals who have been persecuted, or who have a well-founded fear of persecution, on account of their membership in a ‘particular social group,’ but most victims of personal crimes do not fit this definition — no matter how vile and reprehensible the crime perpetrated against them," the department said in a statement.

    "The Department of Justice remains committed to reducing violence against women and enforcing laws against domestic violence, both in the United States and around the world," the statement added.

    On June 11, Session first moved to restrict the kinds of cases that qualify for asylum and later issued guidance to asylum officers. The lawsuit was filed on behalf of 12 parents and children who, the ACLU says, were wrongly found not to have a credible fear of return.

    If Sessions' memo stands, the lawsuit argues, people "desperately seeking safety will be unlawfully deported to places where they fear they will be raped, kidnapped, beaten, and killed."

    Under U.S. and international law, a person may seek asylum based on persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution because of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.

    Asylum cases were already difficult to win. Only 20 percent of asylum applications were granted last fiscal year, according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which handles some asylum cases.

    The Trump administration has said the asylum process is being exploited by immigrants who are counting on passing the initial credible fear screening and being released into the country.

    Sessions' June memo overruled a 2014 decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals that gave asylum status to a Guatemalan woman who fled her husband after what the board called "repugnant abuse." The board found that the woman qualified for asylum because she was a member of a particular social group — in this case, married women in Guatemala who could not leave their relationship.

    Immigration courts and judges operate under the Justice Department, and Sessions can overrule the board. In this case, he said the board had erred.

    Many asylum seekers "are leaving difficult and dangerous situations," Sessions said in a June speech. "But we cannot abandon legal discipline and sound legal concepts."

    Immigration lawyers say people who they expected would pass credible fear screenings have began to fail them, and lawyers say immigration judges are signing off on more denials during appeals, effectively ending what could have been a years-long asylum process before it begins.

    The number of immigrants who didn't pass credible fear screenings rose in June, according to statistics the government released Tuesday. Asylum officers denied about 13 percent of cases in June compared with 8 percent in May and an average of 10 percent during the previous fiscal year, according to data from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

    "The Trump administration is violating U.S. immigration law, international refugee law, and our Constitution," said Eunice Lee, co-legal director of the Center for Gender & Refugee Studies, in a statement. The center has joined the ACLU in the Grace v. Sessions lawsuit.

    "It's putting the lives of our plaintiffs and thousands of asylum seekers in grave danger," she said.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/aclu-sues-jeff-sessions-over-restricting-asylum-domestic-gang-violence-n898496

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