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Tag: Asylum seekers

  • Officials instructed to pause all asylum decisions in wake of National Guard shooting

    The Trump administration on Friday directed U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services officers to pause all asylum decisions in the wake of the shooting of two National Guard soldiers in Washington, D.C., according to an internal directive obtained by CBS News and two sources familiar with the order.

    The move is the administration’s latest effort to tighten the American immigration system after Wednesday’s attack, which was allegedly carried out by an Afghan man who was granted asylum by U.S. immigration officials earlier this year.

    Asylum officers at USCIS, a branch of the Department of Homeland Security, were instructed to refrain from approving, denying or closing asylum applications received by the agency, according to the internal notice and sources, who requested anonymity to describe an action that has not been publicly announced. 

    On Thursday, the Trump administration said it would start a review of asylum approvals under the Biden administration, citing the shooting of the two National Guard members, one of whom has died. The man accused of shooting the soldiers, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, is an Afghan national who entered the U.S. in 2021 during former President Joe Biden’s presidency and was granted asylum this spring under the second Trump administration.

    The action relayed to USCIS asylum officers internally on Friday amounts to an indefinite pause on asylum adjudications for all nationalities. Asylum cases are filed by foreigners who claim they will suffer persecution if deported or returned to their home countries because of certain factors, including their race, nationality, religion or political views. 

    “Do not enter any decision information for affirmative cases,” a USCIS notice to asylum officers in one office read, referring to asylum cases overseen by the agency. “Defensive” cases, the other type of asylum applications, are filed by those facing deportation and are decided by federal immigration judges at the Justice Department.

    Officers were told the pause applied to all USCIS asylum cases, including those filed by Afghans who arrived under a Biden administration resettlement effort dubbed “Operation Allies Welcome.” They were also told that in-person appointments for asylum applicants to find out what decisions have been made on their cases would be canceled, at least for Monday.

    The guidance said officers could continue asylum application interviews and review cases up to the point of making a decision. “Once you’ve reached decision entry, stop and hold,” the directive said.

    In a statement to CBS News Friday, USCIS Director Joe Edlow confirmed CBS News’ reporting.

    “USCIS has halted all asylum decisions until we can ensure that every alien is vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible,” Edlow said. “The safety of the American people always comes first.” 

    According to Homeland Security officials, Lakanwal was allowed to enter the U.S. in September 2021 through the humanitarian parole policy, which the Biden administration used to resettle tens of thousands of Afghans evacuated following the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan. He applied for asylum in 2024 and his application was granted earlier this year, the officials said.

    Following Wednesday’s shooting, the Trump administration has unveiled a series of immigration measures it argues will bolster the government’s ability to mitigate the chances of similar attacks.  

    Officials first announced an indefinite pause on the processing of all legal immigration applications — ranging from citizenship and green card cases, to requests for work permits and asylum — filed by applicants from Afghanistan. 

    USCIS’ director, Joseph Edlow, then announced he had ordered, at President Trump’s direction, a “full scale, rigorous reexamination” of green card cases involving nationals affected by a presidential proclamation that fully or partially suspended travel and immigration from 19 countries. That list, released in June and which the White House referred to as a “travel ban,” includes Afghanistan and other countries in Asia and the Middle East, such as Iran, as well as African nations, including Somalia and Sudan. Mr. Trump’s order also applies to nationals of Cuba, Haiti and Venezuela.

    USCIS published a policy Thursday that allows adjudicators to cite concerns about the inability to properly vet and identify green card applicants from the group of 19 countries as a potential reason to deny their cases.

    “Certain countries (including but not limited to Afghanistan, Eritrea, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen, and Venezuela) lack a competent or central authority for issuing passports and civil documents among other concerns, which directly relates to USCIS’ ability to meaningfully assess eligibility for benefit requests including identity, and therefore whether an alien warrants a favorable exercise of discretion,” USCIS said in its guidance.

    Late Thursday, Mr. Trump vowed to “permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries,” writing on Truth Social that his administration would revoke the citizenship of those it deems “undermine domestic tranquility” and deport any foreigner “who is a public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western Civilization.” 

    The White House has not yet clarified publicly what actions would be taken to execute the president’s announcement.

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  • U.K. Follows Europe and U.S. in Crackdown on Asylum Seekers

    LONDON—The U.K. government on Monday announced an overhaul of its immigration policy to deter asylum seekers from arriving on British shores, the latest European nation to tighten rules in response to growing dissatisfaction from voters at levels of illegal immigration.

    The Labour government of Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a suite of policies including changing laws to make it easier to expel migrants, quadrupling the length of time they have to wait to become permanent residents to 20 years and regularly reviewing whether their home countries have become safer and can take them back.

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  • Four killed after two boats carrying migrants capsize off Libya’s coast

    At least four people have been killed when two boats carrying migrants and asylum seekers capsized off Libya’s coast, according to the Libyan Red Crescent.

    In a statement on Saturday, the organisation said the incident occurred off the coastal city of al-Khums on Thursday night.

    It said the first boat was carrying 26 people from Bangladesh, four of whom died.

    The second boat carried 69 people, including two Egyptians and dozens of Sudanese, the Red Crescent added, without specifying their fate. Eight of them were children, it said.

    Al-Khums is a coastal city, some 118km (73 miles) east of the capital, Tripoli.

    Libya has become a transit route for migrants and asylum seekers fleeing conflict and poverty to Europe since the 2011 fall of dictator Muammar Gaddafi during a NATO-backed uprising.

    Pictures released by the Libyan Red Crescent showed a line of bodies in black plastic bags laid out on the floor, while the volunteers are seen providing first aid to the survivors.

    Other pictures show the rescued people wrapped in thermal blankets sitting on the floor.

    The statement added that coastguards and Al-Khums Port Security Agency participated in the rescue operation. Adding that the bodies were handed over to the relevant authorities based on instructions by the city’s public prosecution.

    On Wednesday, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said that at least 42 migrants went missing and were presumed dead after a rubber boat sank near the Al Buri oilfield, an offshore facility north-northwest of the Libyan coast.

    In mid-October, a group of 61 bodies of migrants were recovered on the coast west of Tripoli. In September, IOM said at least 50 people had died after a vessel carrying 75 Sudanese refugees caught fire off Libya’s coast.

    Several states, including the United Kingdom, Spain, Norway and Sierra Leone, urged Libya last week at a United Nations meeting in Geneva to close detention centres where rights groups say migrants and refugees have been tortured, abused and sometimes killed.

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  • US Refugee Groups Sound Alarm On Potential Trump Changes

    A number of refugee groups have sounded the alarm after a report said President Donald Trump’s administration is considering an overhaul of the United States refugee system to favor white people.

    Proposals presented to the White House earlier this year would give preference to English speakers, white South Africans and Europeans who oppose migration, The New York Times reported this week.

    Refugees groups slammed the reported proposals, with one telling Newsweek that such plans are “profoundly harmful” and “contrary to core American values.”

    Newsweek has contacted the U.S. State Department and the White House for comment via emails sent outside regular business hours.

    Why It Matters

    The U.S. has long been a leader in the resettlement of refugees, but the reported proposals would transform a program intended to help the most vulnerable people in the world at a time when forcible displacement is on the rise globally.

    U.S. and international law say that refugee admissions must be based on a credible fear of persecution, and prohibit discrimination based on race, religion or ethnicity.

    The reported proposals come at a time when the Trump administration is engaged in an aggressive crackdown on immigration in U.S. cities, after Trump campaigned on a pledge to carry out the largest mass deportation in American history.

    What To Know 

    The Times reported that the plans were presented to the White House earlier this year by State Department and Department of Homeland Security officials after Trump directed the agencies to examine whether refugee resettlement was in the interest of the country.

    According to documents obtained by the newspaper, the proposals suggest allowing entry only to refugees who “fully and appropriately assimilate, and are aligned with the president’s objectives.”

    They also suggest prioritizing Europeans who have been “targeted for peaceful expression of views online such as opposition to mass migration or support for ‘populist’ political parties.”

    Administration officials have not ruled out any of the ideas, according to The Times, which cited unnamed people familiar with the planning.

    But some of the proposals have already been enacted, the newspaper noted, including cutting refugee admissions and proritizing Afrikaners, the white minority who created and enforced South Africa’s system of apartheid.

    Trump halted refugee admissions after returning to office in January, saying the country “lacks the ability to absorb large numbers of migrants, and in particular, refugees, into its communities in a manner that does not compromise the availability of resources for Americans, that protects their safety and security, and that ensures the appropriate assimilation of refugees.”  

    The Trump administration announced a new scheme in February to accept Afrikaners even as other refugee programs remain paused. The administration says the white South African farmers face discrimination and violence in South Africa, which the country’s government denies.

    Earlier in October, Reuters reported that Trump is considering setting a refugee admissions cap at 7,500 people this fiscal year, a record low.

    Lisa D’Annunzio, the executive director of Asylum Access, hit back at the reported proposals. She told Newsweek people seeking refuge in the U.S. “deserve compassion and protection, not policies rooted in racism and xenophobia.”

    Bridget Cusick, the vice president of marketing, communications and outreach at Jesus Refugee Service USA, said the U.S.’s policies and systems should serve those in real need who can safely be resettled in numbers that reflect our nation’s longstanding generosity toward the “tired, poor, homeless, tempest-tost” the Statue of Liberty famously welcomes.”

    What People Are Saying 

    Lisa D’Annunzio, the executive director of Asylum Access, told Newsweek: “The Trump administration’s proposed overhaul of the U.S. refugee system is alarming, profoundly harmful, and contrary to core American values. People seeking safety deserve compassion and protection, not policies rooted in racism and xenophobia.”

    Bridget Cusick, the vice president of marketing, communications and outreach at Jesus Refugee Service USA, told Newsweek: “Since 1980, more than 3 million thoroughly vetted refugees have come to the United States, seeking refuge due to well documented instances of persecution and fear based on their race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group. This has both saved lives and redounded enormously to our benefit economically, culturally, and socially. At a time where tens of millions of refugees around the world have suffered immense harms and are in need of resettlement or other durable solutions, the U.S.’s policies and systems should serve those in real need who can safely be resettled in numbers that reflect our nation’s longstanding generosity toward the “tired, poor, homeless, tempest-tost” the Statue of Liberty famously welcomes.”

    In response to reports the Trump administration is planning to cut refugee admissions to a record low, Naomi Steinberg, vice president of U.S. policy and advocacy at HIAS, the Jewish nonprofit organization providing services to refugees and asylum seekers, said: “A refugee program of this nature would deliberately leave vulnerable people in danger all around the world, rendering it unrecognizable. It would be a betrayal of our proud and bipartisan legacy of welcoming refugees, a tradition that is also shared across faith communities across the country.”

    Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, president and CEO of Global Refuge, said earlier in October: “The U.S. refugee admissions program is one of the few remaining expressions of America’s humanitarian leadership on the world stage. To drastically lower the admissions cap and concentrate the majority of available slots on one group would mark a profound departure from decades of bipartisan refugee policy rooted in law, fairness, and global responsibility.”

    Vignarajah added: “What refugee families need most is a pathway to protection that is consistent, principled, and grounded in the promise that every life matters equally, not just the few who fit a favored profile.” 

    Thomas Pigott, a spokesman for the State Department, told the Times: “It should come as no surprise that the State Department is implementing the priorities of the duly elected president of the United States.” 

    He added: “This administration unapologetically prioritizes the interests of the American people.”

    What’s Next 

    Although some proposals have been enacted, it remains to be seen whether the Trump administration fully implements the reported proposals to overhaul the refugee system.

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  • Thousands of rejected Germany asylum seekers said to be in hiding

    Tens of thousands of planned deportations of rejected asylum seekers from Germany are being cancelled due to mass disappearances and the sudden presentation of medical certificates, according to the country’s top police officer.

    “Last year alone, we had about 53,800 deportations registered with us by the states. Around 33,600 of these measures were cancelled before the person was even handed over to us,” Dieter Romann told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper, which was made available to media in advance on Saturday.

    Behind the cancellations, according to Romann, is the fact that many of those required to leave the country went into hiding on the day of departure or presented medical certificates at short notice that prevented their deportation.

    “Unfortunately, that is the reality: behind every number lies a huge amount of effort. And as long as so many measures have to be cancelled in advance, the gap between those required to leave the country and those who actually do so will remain large.”

    Romann is particularly critical of the lack of detention centres for deportees in Germany.

    “When there are 226,000 people required to leave the country but fewer than 800 detention centres, the state police and the federal police will continue to be unable to detain individuals when they are found, even if the legal requirements for doing so are met,” he said.

    This means that those affected are bound to go into hiding, the official added.

    In its coalition agreement, the government that took office in May committed itself to increasing the number of deportations of rejected asylum seekers.

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  • 6/3: CBS Evening News

    6/3: CBS Evening News

    6/3: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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  • 6/3: The Daily Report with John Dickerson

    6/3: The Daily Report with John Dickerson

    6/3: The Daily Report with John Dickerson – CBS News


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    John Dickerson reports on an executive order that could restrict asylum processing at the southern border, the historic election outcome in Mexico, and what’s really behind the dark web.

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  • Asylum seekers scrambling to find local housing 

    Asylum seekers scrambling to find local housing 

    ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) – It’s been one year since asylum seekers from New York City were sent to the Capital District by busloads. We told you about the evacuation at the Rotterdam Super 8, where many of them were living, now the New York City mayor’s office is asking the Rotterdam community for help housing them.

    Following their removal from the Rotterdam Super 8 – due to no working sprinkler or fire alarm system – asylum seekers tell NEWS10 they have been told by DocGo that they will be removed from the current hotel they’re staying in. 

    One person told me, “They only gave us 8 days to vacate the hotel where we are, in reality we don’t have anything to rent and we don’t want to go to New York.”

    Many of the children attend school in the Mohonasen Central School District. Superintendent Shannon Shine said the situation is dynamic.

    “They were informed they could stay for six weeks, which would take them to the end of the school year and apparently the hotel mid-last week said it would be sold and everyone had to be out by June 1,” said Shine.

    Shine said DocGo has offered to buy asylum seekers tickets, on any mode of transportation, to anywhere they have family or other living arrangements. However, an asylum seeker tells me he’s concerned because he does not have a place to go. 

    “They will transport them free of charge, plane, train or automobile. The guy said actually anywhere in the world and I guess that would deal with, can you get into another country or not? Passports, customs laws. But certainly anywhere in the United States they want to go if they have family or if they have friends. A job, a place to go,” said Shine.

    Shine said things are changing rapidly, but he’s been following the situation closely because they have a legal obligation to educate all students in the district. 

    “We want them to finish if at all possible, we know it’s good for them, but some of these things may ultimately turn out to be beyond our control,” said Shine.

    He and his staff have heard harrowing stories about what the students and their families have been through.

    “It’s pretty affronting when you listen to the sheer number of miles traveled. People taking advantage in, different countries. It runs the gamut from murder, extortion, rape, bribery, charging excessive amounts, taking advantage of people financially. Sex trafficking. All of that isn’t like ‘Oh yeah we think that this could happen’. No, it did happen, it is happening which makes it pretty brutal,” said Shine. “And then you have kids who were there throughout the whole thing, depending on the age of the kids they may have been involved in some of these things.”

    Shine said the district has resources and helping asylum seekers does not take away from other students. He said the students and their families have been through some heart wrenching challenges.

    “People may have political opinions about this, but that’s outside of my purview. What is inside of my purview is students in our district, residing here, are our responsibility and we will do the best we can for them,” said Shine.

    Shine said there’s a slim chance asylum seekers could stay in the area and if they stay he will do what he can to transport students to school. 

    The New York City Mayor’s office released a statement saying, “We are pursuing all available options to keep these families in Rotterdam, where they have lived for months, so that school-aged children can finish their school year there. We welcome any businesses, faith institutions, or community organizations in the area who can temporarily accommodate these families to please reach out.”

    The New York City mayor’s office is asking anyone in a position to help to contact the city by sending an email to asylumseekersupport@cityhall.nyc.gov

    Carina Dominguez

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  • What is the U.K. plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda?

    What is the U.K. plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda?

    London — The British parliament passed a law late Monday that will mean asylum seekers arriving on British shores without prior permission can be sent to Rwanda and forbidden from ever returning to the U.K. The British government says the law will act as deterrent to anyone trying to enter the U.K. “illegally.”

    The contentious program was voted through after the U.K.’s Supreme Court ruled it to be unlawful, and it has been condemned by human rights groups and the United Nations refugee agency.

    King Charles III, who now must give the Rwanda bill his royal ascent to make it an official law, reportedly criticized the plan as “appalling” almost two years ago as it took shape.  

    Hours after the law was passed, French officials said at least five people drowned, including a child, in the English Channel during an attempt to make it to the U.K. on an overcrowded small boat.

    Why would the U.K. send asylum seekers to Rwanda?

    The Rwanda plan was put together by Britain’s Conservative government in response to a number of migrant and asylum seeker arrivals on British shores in small boats from France.

    With local asylum programs underfunded and overwhelmed, the government has been housing asylum seekers in hotels, where they are effectively trapped and unable to work until their claims are processed, which can take years. These hotels cost the government around 8 million pounds — almost $10 million in taxpayer money — every day to rent, according to CBS News partner BBC News.

    A protester holds a placard mocking the government's Rwanda
    A protester holds a placard mocking the government’s Rwanda plan for asylum seekers during a demonstration in Parliament Square, London, March 13, 2024.

    Vuk Valcic/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty


    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s government says the Rwanda policy will act as a deterrent to prevent migrants and asylum seekers from trying to reach the U.K. in the first place.

    What is the U.K.’s Rwanda law?

    The new policy will give Britain’s immigration authorities power to send any asylum seeker entering the U.K. “illegally” after January 2022 to Rwanda. Those individuals can also be forbidden from ever applying for asylum in the U.K.

    It will apply to anyone who arrives in the U.K. without prior permission — anyone who travels on a small boat or truck — even if their aim is to claim asylum and they have legitimate grounds to do so.

    These people can, under the new law, be immediately sent to Rwanda, 4,000 miles away in East Africa, to have their asylum claim processed there. Under the law they could be granted refugee status in Rwanda and allowed to stay.

    What are the issues with the Rwanda law?

    The law has been the subject of intense controversy and political wrangling.

    In November 2023, the U.K. Supreme Court ruled the program was unlawful and violated the European Convention on Human Rights, because it said genuine refugees would be at risk of being deported back to their home countries, where they could face harm. The judgment also cited concerns with Rwanda’s human rights record.

    The final legislation passed late Monday orders the court to ignore parts of the Human Rights Act and other U.K. and international rules, such as the Refugee Convention, that would also block the deportations to Rwanda, the BBC reported.

    Rights groups have said they will launch legal challenges against deporting people to Rwanda as quickly as possible. This could delay any removal flights. 

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  • 7 migrants arrested in New York City robbery pattern, officials say

    7 migrants arrested in New York City robbery pattern, officials say


    NYPD says it’s broken up citywide robbery ring


    NYPD says it’s broken up citywide robbery ring

    02:47

    NEW YORK — Seven migrants were arrested, including several Monday morning in an NYPD raid in the Bronx targeting a crew behind a citywide robbery pattern, the NYPD said. 

    Police believe they are part of group responsible for a citywide pattern of cellphone robberies. Some of the stolen goods were recovered in the raid, police said. 

    Police said it all starts with criminals on scooters who steal people’s cellphones, and then hack into them to get access to banking apps. 

    Surveillance video shows one incident in which a suspect on a scooter grabs a victim’s bag, dragging them to the sidewalk. 

    The investigation led to a raid and several arrests Monday at an apartment in the Allerton section of the Bronx. Police have issued warrants for three other suspects and believe even more are out there.

    Robbery ring was run by a Venezuelan migrant, police say

    Videos provided by the NYPD show suspects working in pairs on mopeds tugging at, and often knocking over, unsuspecting victims to wrestle free iPhones, bags, and wallets. 

    Police officers, accompanied by Mayor Eric Adams, made multiple arrests in an apartment at 2790 Bronx Park East, described as a stash house or headquarters for a wide-ranging, multi-borough cellphone robbery operation connected to more than a dozen suspects. Many of them are migrants, according to police. 

    “These small number of people are breaking the law and are having a huge impact on our public safety, and that is why we zeroed in on them,” Adams said. “We’re not going to sit idly by while people choose to prey on their fellow New Yorkers.”   

    “This administration, police department, we’ve always talked about welcoming asylum seekers. But once you start robbing people and stealing from them, your status is criminal, and you’ll be treated as such,” NYPD Deputy Commissioner Tarik Sheppard said. 

    “It doesn’t matter if a person is a migrant, asylum or if the person is a long-term New Yorker. You break the law, it’ll be investigated, and it will be handled by our criminal justice system,” Adams said. “You should not be allowed to walk the streets of the city of New York if you are committing any form of criminal behavior that’s impacting the quality of life of New Yorkers.” 

    The arrests went down in the apartment of Victor Parra, the alleged ringleader, at around 5:30 a.m. Monday.  Parra is still at large, police said.


    Mayor, NYPD discuss citywide robbery pattern arrests

    22:40

    “So in recent months, a wave of migrant crime has washed over our city. But by no means do the individuals committing these crimes represent the vast number of people coming to New York to build a better life. But they are, nonetheless, preying on New Yorkers and making our city less safe,” NYPD Commissioner Edward Caban said.

    The police commissioner said what’s making this case particularly difficult to crack is the suspected migrants involved have very little paper trail — no criminal record in the U.S., no social media and sometimes, he said, it’s hard for police to even authenticate a suspect’s name or date of birth.

    “I want to reiterate the overwhelming number of 170,000-plus migrants and asylum seekers are attempting to continue their next leg of their journey of pursuing the American dream. But those who commit a crime will be treated like any other criminal in this city. No different mindset, no different reaction, no different response from the police department,” Adams said.

    Crooks used scooters for snatch-and-grab robberies, police say

    “We believe the individuals involved have been involved in 62 robbery incidents across our city, including our transit system. Including riding on mopeds, scooters, and snatching property of New Yorkers, such as iPhones and wallets. These individuals do not have a license to steal in our city,” Adams said.

    Adams said the NYPD seized more than 2,500 illegal mopeds and scooters last year — a 74% increase over the year prior.

    “The crimes in this pattern involved multiple thieves on mopeds, snatching cellphones and purses from victims. These thieves would ride up behind their victims on the sidewalk, steal their property, and then make their getaway. The majority of the victims are women, simply just walking alone. We have seen that the mopeds used in these crimes are also stolen as well,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said.

    Scooters and mopeds have become the vehicle of choice for criminals in New York City.

    Back in July, CBS New York got an exclusive look at how the NYPD has been going on the offensive, targeting what it describes as roving groups of unlicensed scooters, similar to the ones used in this ring.

    “Mopeds and scooters are being used for crimes and harming innocent people. I want to be clear, again, the law is coming for those who use mopeds illegally,” Adams said.

    Police said the robbery pattern started in November 2023 on the Upper East Side and the most recent incident happened on Sunday night in Chinatown. 

    “This network of thieves predominantly live in the migrant shelter system. They use social media platforms to organize and coordinate their thefts,” Kenny said. 

    Authorities said Parra would put out the request on WhatsApp, and that the scooter drivers and thieves may not even know one another. 

    “Once the messages are received, the crime wave begins, with the scooter operators making $100 a day, and the actual phone snatcher making between $300-600 per phone that is stolen,” Kenny said. 

    The stolen phones were brought to Parra, who used a “tech guy who is able to hack into these stolen phones, where he gains access to the victim’s financial and banking apps,” Kenny said.

    Investigators said the suspects were grabbing phones because they are attracted to payment apps, including Apple Pay. Detectives said suspects used credit cards linked to phones. 

    Kenny said so far police have identified 14 members of the crew, and that seven had been arrested so far. More arrests are expected.

    Authorities said the people arrested have so far not been connected to the recent assault on two members of the NYPD in Times Square

    Some Bronx residents said the theft ring worries them, especially for their most vulnerable loved ones and neighbors. 

    “I’m very scared, and my mother, she’s right there, and it’s very scary for the older people, too,” said Bronx resident Pamela Colon. “It’s not right what they’re doing.” 

    A “national problem,” Adams says

    “This is a national problem. We need a national solution, on both sides of the aisle. Republicans have blocked real immigration reform for many years. It is time for us to deal with this real issue that’s impacting cities, not only New York,” Adams said. “This is a national problem that’s impacting cities. And our message is a clear one: Over 175,000 migrants and asylum seekers that have arrived here, this is 12 people. So any New Yorker that looks at those who are trying to fulfill their next step on the American dream as criminals, that is wrong. That is not what we’re seeing. The overwhelming number of migrants and asylum seekers want to work. They want to contribute to our society. They believe we have put a pause on their progression on contributing to our society. We should not in any way take these criminals and state that they are the indicators of the people who are here.” 

    “This is not about migrants and asylum seekers. It’s about criminals who committed a crime. And we would treat criminals the same if they’re longstanding New Yorkers, or if they just arrived here last year. These are criminals that we brought to justice,” Adams said. 





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  • Exclusive: NYPD crack down on illegal scooters amid investigation into officers attacked

    Exclusive: NYPD crack down on illegal scooters amid investigation into officers attacked


    NEW YORK (WABC) — An army of police fanned out at migrant facilities throughout the city Wednesday night to target a problem that’s exploded in recent months: unregistered scooters.

    Eyewitness News was on the scene as officers cracked down on the issue, they say has become a persistent quality of life issue in Manhattan.

    “We had to come here, and we had to do our job,” said NYPD Assistant Commissioner Kaz Daughtry.

    The first order of business was they went for the bikes.

    Dozens of bikes without registrations were confiscated, some with plates stolen off other bikes somewhere in the city.

    All of them were immediately carted away on a police flatbed.

    Wednesday’s operation was about a lot more than illegal bikes, as it comes after Saturday night’s melee near Times Square, where a dozen men — believed to be asylum seekers — attacked two police officers.

    Five were arrested on the spot.

    “Nobody’s going home tonight until we find the guys who assaulted our cops,” assured Daughtry.

    Police arrested the man dressed in yellow in the video and are still on the hunt for as many as five more.

    “We’re not going to tolerate individuals attacking out cops,” said Daughtry. “That’s not going to happen. We will comb this globe to look for you and bring you to justice.”

    NYPD Asst. Commissioner Daughtry led teams of cops who scoured the area around the Row Hotel, a migrant center in Hell’s Kitchen, and they inspected more of those bikes, which have been involved in a growing number of robberies and the focus of police citywide for weeks.

    “We are seeing an uptick of scooter robberies in the city, particularly in Manhattan, where individuals are on scooters, normally two on a scooter, and they’re taking their cell phones, AirPods, Beats, wallets, purses,” said Daughtry. “We’re going to be over aggressively going after these scooters and moped on city streets.”

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  • House Republicans voice opposition to Senate immigration plan

    House Republicans voice opposition to Senate immigration plan


    House Republicans voice opposition to Senate immigration plan – CBS News


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    House Republicans are rallying against a bipartisan Senate plan on immigration reform that is still being finalized. The bill would allow the president to deport most migrants seeking asylum whenever illegal border crossings surge. Nancy Cordes reports.

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  • Senate negotiating immigration bill

    Senate negotiating immigration bill


    Senate negotiating immigration bill – CBS News


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    Senators were still negotiating the final language of an immigration bill that would allow the president to suspend asylum proceedings as border crossings soar while also raising the standard for accepting asylum seekers. Skyler Henry reports.

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  • Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service Rebrands as Global Refuge

    Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service Rebrands as Global Refuge


    National nonprofit organization that has welcomed and empowered refugees since 1939 seeks to build a bigger table of supporters amid unprecedented humanitarian crises

    The nation’s largest faith-based nonprofit dedicated exclusively to serving and advocating for refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants in the U.S. proudly announces its new name, Global Refuge.

    For 85 years, the nonprofit formerly known as Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service has been a national humanitarian leader through social services, advocacy, and empowerment to restore a sense of home. Since 1939, the organization has served over 750,000 people from around the globe.

    The rebrand to Global Refuge marks a new phase for the nonprofit as it seeks to grow its service impact and build a bigger table of supporters at a time when more than 114 million people have been forcibly displaced from their homes by escalating violence, persecution, and climate disaster, according to the United Nations.

    “We are thrilled to embark on an exciting new chapter rooted in our profound purpose, rich history, and enduring commitment to walking faithfully alongside newcomers at every stage in their journey,” said Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, President and CEO of Global Refuge. “The word ‘Global’ not only describes the diverse backgrounds of the children and families we serve, but also conveys the scale of our vision to grow our humanitarian leadership as a beacon of hope and welcome. ‘Refuge’ is inspired by our Lutheran heritage and conveys a meaning of shelter that extends across all people, faiths, and denominations, just as our work does. At its core, our new name speaks to the place we are creating for immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers in need, the world over.”

    Global Refuge also launched a new website that enhances user experience and leans into rich, human-centered storytelling. The organization’s logo, inspired by the Statue of Liberty’s torch, has undergone a modernization, taking a circular form in keeping with its “global” theme, serving as a timeless reminder that immigration is an integral part of the American Dream.

    The rebrand comes on the heels of tremendous growth for the organization, which now boasts more than 550 employees worldwide. In 2023, Global Refuge also launched innovative lines of service, including new programming in Guatemala for returned youth; New American Community Lending – an economic empowerment initiative to promote financial stability among immigrant families and small businesses; mental health programming for immigrant families and unaccompanied migrant children; as well as a series of Welcome Centers across the country to offer trauma-informed services to refugees and asylum seekers – thanks in part to a transformative $15 million contribution from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott

    “For 85 years, the passion and expertise of our staff, volunteers, and vast partner network – particularly that of countless Lutheran congregations – have shined brightly as a beacon of belonging, opportunity, and grace for newcomers,” concluded Vignarajah. “For the next 85 years and beyond, where there is need, Global Refuge will be there to lead.”

    Source: Global Refuge



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  • Mayor Eric Adams sues 17 charter bus companies for $700 million for transporting asylum seekers to NYC

    Mayor Eric Adams sues 17 charter bus companies for $700 million for transporting asylum seekers to NYC

    Mayor Adams sues 17 charter bus companies for $700 million for bringing asylum seekers to NYC


    Mayor Adams sues 17 charter bus companies for $700 million for bringing asylum seekers to NYC

    00:57

    NEW YORK — In a stunning and unexpected move to stop Texas Gov. Greg Abbott from shipping busloads of asylum seekers to New York City, Mayor Eric Adams has filed a lawsuit against 17 charter bus companies used by the Lone Star State.

    He wants the bus companies to reimburse the city for the hundreds of millions of dollars it’s cost to shelter them.

    Just call it the Empire State strikes back, with a bold counter punch to Abbott.

    “New York City has and will always do our part to manage this humanitarian crisis, but we cannot bear the cost of reckless political ploys from the state of Texas, alone,” Adams said.

    READ MOREMayor Eric Adams exploring idea of using NYPD to stop Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s ploy of busing asylum seekers to N.J.

    The mayor sued the bus companies who, since the spring of 2022, have been used by Abbott to ship asylum seekers to New York, with officials showing them maps, giving them bar-coded bracelets with their destinations clearly marked, and then checked by drivers to make sure they land in the city.

    The suit seeks $708 million to compensate the city for the cost of shelter, food and health care.

    “These companies have violated state law by not paying the cost of caring for these migrants,” Adams said.

    READ MOREHundreds of asylum seekers pass through New Jersey train stations, Gov. Murphy says

    The suit charges the companies with “bad faith” conduct and violating New York social service law by dumping the asylum seekers in New York City without providing a means of support.

    “Gov. Abbott’s continued use of migrants as political pawns is not only chaotic and inhumane, but makes clear he puts politics over people,” Adams said.

    The last straw for the mayor was apparently Abbott’s decision to send buses to New Jersey train stations connecting to New York City to thwart an executive order limiting the days and and hours busloads of asylum seekers could arrive here.

    READ MOREGov. Phil Murphy targets Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, Congress over asylum seeker crisis developing in New Jersey

    Adams is also seeking to build a regional coalition to stop Abbott.

    “I communicated with the governor of New Jersey last night. We also spoke with the governor of Connecticut. We’ve got to continue to reach out to our colleagues in the region,” Adams said.

    Adams and Abbott have been engaged in an intense game of Texas Hold ‘Em poker over the asylum seeker crisis. It remains to be seen if the suit will force Abbott to throw in his chips.

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  • Elon Musk set to attend Italy leader Giorgia Meloni’s conservative Atreju political festival in Rome

    Elon Musk set to attend Italy leader Giorgia Meloni’s conservative Atreju political festival in Rome

    Rome — Elon Musk will attend a conservative political festival in Rome on Saturday organized by Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and her far right-wing party, the Brothers of Italy, the party says. In addition to the tech billionaire, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, Spanish far-right Vox party leader Santiago Abascal and Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama were set to join the Atreju festival in the Italian capital.

    Musk, the founder of Tesla and SpaceX who bought Twitter last year, travelled to Rome in June to meet Meloni and the two discussed the dangers of artificial intelligence, as well as how to shore up Italy’s declining population. Italy has one of the lowest birth rates in the world.

    UK Government Hosts AI Safety Summit 2023
    Elon Musk is seen at the AI Safety Summit 2023 at Bletchley Park in Bletchley, U.K., Nov. 1, 2023.

    Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg/Getty


    Sunak and Meloni are political allies who have put immigration at the center of their political agendas. The two jointly penned an editorial calling for tougher action against illegal immigration, and Sunak’s government has been trying to get a contentious plan past the U.K. courts that would see it fly migrants and asylum seekers who arrive on Britain’s shores without permission to Rwanda for processing.

    At a London meeting in April, Sunak told Meloni their two countries were “very aligned” in their values. Meloni, who was elected last year to head her country’s most right-wing government since World War II, has proposed sending some migrants who arrive in Italy to Albania for processing.           


    Far-right leader becomes Italy’s new prime minister

    05:46

    The Atreju festival, which takes its name from the central character in the fantasy book and movie “The NeverEnding Story,” was started by Meloni in 1998 to gather and celebrate Italy’s conservative youth. At the time she was the head of the Rome branch of a right-wing youth movement.

    In addition to political speeches, the festival will entertain approximately 10,000 attendees with a Christmas village, ice rink and concerts.

    Past guests at the festival include Hungary’s far-right Prime Minister Viktor Orban and American political operative Steve Bannon, a former advisor to Donald Trump.

    Musk is slated to give a speech Saturday, followed by Sunak. The rally ends Sunday, when Meloni will deliver closing remarks.

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  • 10/5: CBS Evening News

    10/5: CBS Evening News

    10/5: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    White House to allow new wall construction along southern border; No injuries after FedEx plane crash lands in Tennessee

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  • End of pandemic-era practice of providing interpreters for asylum seekers stirs confusion, anger

    End of pandemic-era practice of providing interpreters for asylum seekers stirs confusion, anger

    Asylum seekers face new hurdle to enter US


    Asylum seekers face new hurdle to enter US

    02:37

    MIAMI — Critics are saying the end of a pandemic-era practice to provide interpreters for those seeking asylum is putting lives at risk.

    The change in immigration policy has forced some asylum seekers to find and retain their own interpreters to get status.

    “It is very difficult,” said Irma, who is from Peru and fled from the country with her 15-year-old son seven months ago. They carried two suitcases that were stolen during their journey across the United States border.

    Such asylum seekers who do not face removal hearings can apply for affirmative asylum status. Those facing removal hearings can file for defensive asylum.

    During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Department of Homeland Security suspended requirements for people seeking asylum to bring their own interpreter to interviews with immigration authorities. DHS began providing professional interpreters for virtual interviews in order to limit potential exposure to the virus in face-to-face meetings.

    This month, funding for such service ended.

    As planned when DHS began providing interpreters, authorities ordered the department to go back to the original regulations requiring applicants bring their own interpreters to interviews.

    “What we learned during the time of COVID was that there really isn’t a need for DHS to require people to bring their own interpreter as the rule the existing rule requires,” said Luz Lopez, senior supervising attorney for the Immigrant Justice Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center. “It is fine. The government can function fine providing the interpreter services itself.”

    Lopez said fairness is at stake.

    She said Executive Order 13166 requires the federal government to comply with language access regulations similar to Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

    “In order to have a fair asylum proceeding, you need to make sure that an interpreter is qualified that they can accurately and effectively interpret,” she said. “The only way we can really guarantee that is to have persons who are professionals interpreting. We do that when we have criminal proceedings in state or federal court cause we know the importance of having accurate interpretation and translation of documents. So when we’re talking about asylum seekers during an asylum interview how important would it be to have a qualified interpreter? It can be the difference between that person’s life or death.”

    Miami-based immigration attorney Willie Allen said the current regulation leaves people vulnerable. He thinks people working through the process alone could be scammed.

    “You’re depending entirely on the interpreter,” Allen said. “A poor interpreter, somebody that has not been certified or not had the experience being an interpreter concerns (me) in how you can tell your story and how it comes across. It’s so important to be able to tell your story correctly with a correct language. The difference between winning and losing is in the translation.”

    In Creole, affirmative asylum seeker Romel, who also did not provide his full name, said he is concerned interpreters will give agents the wrong information. He experienced it when he came to port from Haiti.

    “They asked him if he’s experienced incredible fear,” said Itiah Daho Fon, Romel’s immigration document preparer while outside DHS’s Miami asylum office Thursday. “He does not remember at all that they have asked him that.”

    The answer given by a translator he found at the port to immigration authorities pushed his application into the defensive asylum seeking portal, which delayed his quest for affirmative asylum.

    “It’s not a word for word translation,” Daho Fon said. “You really have to also have a certain level of legality to understand the legal terms to use.”

    Allen and Lopez said interpretation problems have led to families being separated or worse.

    Irma said robbers took everything from her family back in Peru. They stole her front door, kidnapped her son and when she and the teen were reunited, the attackers assaulted and threatened to kill them.

    Both escaped soon after. 

    However, with no job, no documentation and so far no lawyer to help, she is searching for someone to help translate her story in a way that wins asylum and keeps her son out harms way.

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  • Biden Lets Venezuelan Migrants Work

    Biden Lets Venezuelan Migrants Work

    President Joe Biden’s administration moved boldly yesterday to solve his most immediate immigration problem at the risk of creating a new target for Republicans who accuse him of surrendering control of the border.

    Yesterday, the Department of Homeland Security extended legal protections under a federal program called Temporary Protected Status (TPS) that will allow as many as 472,000 migrants from Venezuela to live and work legally in the United States for at least the next 18 months.

    With that decision, the administration aligned with the consensus among almost all the key players in the Democratic coalition about the most important thing Biden could do to help big Democratic-leaning cities facing an unprecedented flow of undocumented migrants, many of whom are from Venezuela.

    In a series of public statements over the past few months, Democratic mayors in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and other major cities; Democrats in the House and Senate; organized labor leaders; and immigrant advocacy and civil-rights groups all urged Biden to take the step that the administration announced yesterday.

    Extending TPS protections to more migrants from Venezuela “is the strongest tool in the toolbox for the administration, and the most effective way of meeting the needs of both recently arrived immigrants and the concerns of state and local officials,” Angela Kelley, a former senior adviser to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, told me immediately after the decision was announced.

    Despite the panoramic pressure from across the Democratic coalition, the administration had been hesitant to pursue this approach. Inside the administration, as Greg Sargent of The Washington Post first reported, some feared that providing legal protection to more Venezuelans already here would simply encourage others from the country to come. With polls showing widespread disapproval of Biden’s handling of border security, and Republicans rallying behind an array of hard-line immigration policies, the president has also appeared deeply uncomfortable focusing any attention on these issues.

    But immigrant advocates watching the internal debate believe that the argument tipped because of changing conditions on the ground. The tide of migrants into Democratic-run cities has produced wrenching scenes of new arrivals sleeping in streets, homeless shelters, or police stations, and loud complaints about the impact on local budgets, especially from New York City Mayor Eric Adams. And that has created a situation where not acting to relieve the strain on these cities has become an even a greater political risk to Biden than acting.

    “No matter what, Republicans will accuse the administration of being for open borders,” Maria Cardona, a Democratic strategist working with immigrant-advocacy groups, told me. “That is going to happen anyway. So why not get the political benefit of a good policy that so many of our leaders are clamoring for and need for their cities?”

    Still, it was revealing that the administration paired the announcement about protecting more Venezuelan migrants through TPS with a variety of new proposals to toughen enforcement against undocumented migrants. That reflects the administration’s sensitivity to the relentless Republican accusation—which polls show has resonated with many voters—that Biden has lost control of the southern border.

    As Biden’s administration tries to set immigration policy, it has been forced to pick through a minefield of demands from its allies, attacks from Republicans, and lawsuits from all sides.

    Compounding all of these domestic challenges is a mass migration of millions of people fleeing crime, poverty, and political and social disorder in troubled countries throughout the Americas. In Venezuela alone, political and social chaos has driven more than 7 million residents to seek new homes elsewhere in the Americas, according to a United Nations estimate. “Venezuela is a displacement crisis approximately the size of Syria and Ukraine, but it gets, like, one one-thousandth of the attention,” Todd Schulte, the president and executive director of FWD.us, an immigration-advocacy group, told me. “It’s a huge situation.”

    Most of these displaced people from nations across Central and South America have sought to settle in neighboring countries, but enough have come to the U.S. to overwhelm the nation’s already strained asylum system. The system is so backlogged that experts say it typically takes four to six years for asylum seekers to have their cases adjudicated. If the time required to resolve an asylum case “slips into years, it does become a magnet,” encouraging migrants to come to the border because the law allows them to stay and work in the U.S. while their claims are adjudicated, says Muzaffar Chishti, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, a center-left think tank.

    Former President Donald Trump dealt with this pressure by severely restricting access to asylum. He adopted policies that required asylum seekers to remain in Mexico while their cases were decided; that barred anyone from claiming asylum if they did not first seek it from countries between their homeland and the U.S. border; and, in the case of the pandemic-era Title 42 rule, that turned away virtually all undocumented migrants as threats to public health.

    Fitfully, Biden has undone most of Trump’s approach. (The Migration Policy Institute calculates that the Biden administration has taken 109 separate administrative actions to reverse Trump policies.) And Biden and Mayorkas, with little fanfare, have implemented a robust suite of policies to expand routes for legal immigration, while announcing stiff penalties for those who try to enter the country illegally. “Our overall approach is to build lawful pathways for people to come to the United States, and to impose tougher consequences on those who choose not to use those pathways,” Mayorkas said when he announced the end of Trump’s Title 42 policy.

    Immigration advocates generally express confidence that over time this carrot-and-stick approach will stabilize the southern border, at least somewhat. But it hasn’t yet stanched the flow of new arrivals claiming asylum. Some of those asylum seekers have made their way on their own to cities beyond the border. At least 20,000 more have been bused to such places by Texas Governor Greg Abbott, hoping to produce exactly the sort of tensions in Democratic circles that have erupted in recent weeks.

    However they have arrived, this surge of asylum seekers has created enormous logistical and fiscal challenges in several of these cities. Adams has been the most insistent in demanding more help from the federal government. But he’s far from the only Democratic mayor who has been frustrated by the growing numbers and impatient for the Biden administration to provide more help.

    The top demand from mayors and other Democratic interests has been for Biden to use executive authority to allow more of the new arrivals to work. “There is one solution to this problem: It’s not green cards; it’s not citizenship. It’s work permits,” Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney told me earlier this week. “All these people need work. They wouldn’t be in [a] hotel, they wouldn’t be lying on streets, if they can go to work.”

    That answer seems especially obvious, Kenney continued, because “we have so many industries and so many areas of our commerce that need workers: hotels, restaurants. Let them go to work. [Then] they will get their own apartments, they will take care of their own kids.”

    The obstacle to this solution is that under federal law, asylum seekers cannot apply for authorization to work until 150 days after they filed their asylum claim, and the government cannot approve their request for at least another 30 days. In practice, it usually takes several months longer than that to receive approval. The Biden administration is working with cities to encourage asylum seekers to quickly file work applications, but the process cannot be streamlined much, immigration experts say. Work authorization through the asylum process “is just not designed to get people a work permit,” Todd Schulte said. “They are technically eligible, but the process is way too hard.”

    The inability to generate work permits for large numbers of people through the asylum process has spurred Democratic interest in using the Temporary Protected Status program as an alternative. It allows the federal government to authorize immigrants from countries facing natural disasters, civil war, or other kinds of political and social disorder to legally remain and work in the U.S. for up to 18 months at a time, and to renew those protections indefinitely. That status isn’t provided to everyone who has arrived from a particular country; it’s available only to people living in the U.S. as of the date the federal government grants the TPS designation. For instance, the TPS protection to legally stay in the U.S. is available to people from El Salvador only if they were here by February 2001, after two major earthquakes there.

    The program was not nearly as controversial as other elements of immigration law, at least until Trump took office. As part of his overall offensive against immigration, Trump sought to rescind TPS status for six countries, including Haiti, Honduras, and El Salvador. But Trump was mostly blocked by lawsuits and Biden has reversed all those decisions. Biden has also granted TPS status to migrants from several additional countries, including about 200,000 people who had arrived in the U.S. from Venezuela as of March 2021.

    The demand from Democrats has been that Biden extend that protection, in a move called “redesignation,” to migrants who have arrived from Venezuela since then. Many Democrats have urged him to also update the protections for people from Nicaragua and other countries: A coalition of big-city mayors wrote Biden this summer asking him to extend existing TPS protections or create new ones for 11 countries.

    Following all of Biden’s actions, more immigrants than ever are covered under TPS. But the administration never appeared likely to agree to anything as sweeping as the mayors requested. Yesterday, the administration agreed to extend TPS status only to migrants from Venezuela who had arrived in the U.S. as of July 31. It did not expand TPS protections for any other countries. Angela Kelley, now the chief policy adviser for the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said that providing more TPS coverage to any country beyond Venezuela would be “a bigger piece to chew than the administration is able to swallow now.”

    But advocates considered the decision to cover more Venezuelans under TPS the most important action the administration could take to stabilize the situation in New York and other cities. The reason is that so many of the latest arrivals come from there; one recent survey found that two-thirds of the migrants in New York City shelters arrived from that country. Even including this huge migrant population in TPS won’t allow them to instantly work. The administration will also need to streamline regulations that slow work authorization, experts say. But eventually, Kelley says, allowing more Venezuelans to legally work through TPS would “alleviate a lot of the pressure in New York” and other cities.

    Kerri Talbot, the executive director of the Immigration Hub, an advocacy group, points out the TPS program is actually a better fit for Venezuelans, because the regular asylum process requires applicants to demonstrate that they fear persecution because of their race, religion, or political opinion, which is not the fundamental problem in Venezuela. “Most of them do not have good cases for asylum,” she said of the new arrivals from Venezuela. “They need TPS, because that’s what TPS is designed for: Their country is not functional.”

    Biden’s authority to expand TPS to more Venezuelans is likely to stand up in court against the nearly inevitable legal challenges from Republicans. But extending legal protection to hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans still presents a tempting political target for the GOP. Conservatives such as Elizabeth Jacobs, the director of regulatory affairs and policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, have argued that providing work authorizations for more undocumented migrants would only exacerbate the long-term problem by encouraging more to follow them, in the hope of obtaining such permission as well.

    Immigration advocates note that multiple academic studies show that TPS protections have not in fact inspired a surge of further migrants from the affected countries. Some in the administration remain uncertain about this, but any worries about possibly creating more long-term problems at the border were clearly outweighed by more immediate challenges in New York and other cities.

    If Biden did nothing, he faced the prospect of escalating criticism from Adams and maybe other Democratic mayors and governors that would likely make its way next year into Republican ads denouncing the president’s record on immigration. That risk, many of those watching the debate believe, helped persuade the administration to accept the demands from so many of Biden’s allies to extend TPS to more undocumented migrants, at least from Venezuela. But that doesn’t mean he’ll be happy about this or any of the other difficult choices he faces at the border.

    Ronald Brownstein

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  • Why Republicans Can’t Keep the Government Open

    Why Republicans Can’t Keep the Government Open

    Yesterday was not a good day for House Republicans or for their struggling leader, Speaker Kevin McCarthy. In the morning, McCarthy was forced to scrap a procedural vote on a GOP proposal to avert a government shutdown that will commence at the end of this month if Congress doesn’t act. In the afternoon, a handful of conservatives tanked McCarthy’s bid to advance legislation funding the Pentagon.

    The failure of the proposal to prevent a shutdown was the more ominous defeat, both for Republicans and for the country. Yet even if McCarthy manages to pass a version of this, it will almost certainly be an exercise in futility. For starters, it would fund the government for a mere 30 additional days. And its basic provisions—cutting spending by 8 percent for all but the Defense and Veterans Affairs Departments, restarting construction of the southern border wall, cutting off pathways for asylum seekers—will likely be stripped out by Senate Democrats.

    Despite the GOP’s evident dysfunction, Representative Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota was in a chipper mood when he called me from the Capitol. The McCarthy ally was scurrying between meetings in an effort to help resolve the latest crisis threatening the speaker. “We’re a long way from landing the plane, but there are really productive conversations going on,” Armstrong told me. If the plane represents, in Armstrong’s metaphor, a functioning federal government, then House Republicans are still hovering at about 30,000 feet, with the runway coming rapidly into view.

    The Democrats who run the Senate aren’t involved in the “productive conversations” Armstrong was referencing. If they were, McCarthy might already have lost his job. Before he can negotiate with the Democrats, the speaker must broker a peace among the warring factions of his own party, who cannot even agree on an opening offer. Groups representing the conservative Freedom Caucus and the more pragmatic Main Street Caucus announced a deal on Sunday to support the 30-day extension, with spending cuts and border restrictions attached. But almost immediately, hard-liners rejected the proposal as insufficiently austere. Led by Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida, several of these Republicans are threatening to oust McCarthy if he caves to Democrats on spending, and a few of them are openly itching for a government shutdown.

    Any five Republicans can torpedo proposals that don’t have Democratic support—as five GOP lawmakers did yesterday in blocking the defense bill—and any five could topple McCarthy by voting along with Democrats for a procedural tool known as a motion to vacate the chair. This has effectively made him a hostage of his caucus, with precious little room to maneuver.

    Even the relatively optimistic Armstrong acknowledged the difficulty of McCarthy’s position. “It’s a pretty untenable argument to say you don’t have enough Republican votes to pass anything and you can’t negotiate with Democrats on anything,” Armstrong told me.

    McCarthy has tried many times to shake off threats to his speakership, alternately daring members like Gaetz to make a bid to oust him and pointing out that with such a narrow majority, any other Republican replacement would find themselves in the same unenviable position. I asked Armstrong whether McCarthy should simply ignore the hard-liners in his conference and strike a deal with Democrats to keep the government open, come what may. “I’m not sure he should yet,” he said.

    House Republicans have received hardly any backing from their brethren in the Senate, who have shown no appetite for a shutdown fight and have been more willing to uphold the budget deal that McCarthy struck with President Joe Biden in the spring. By bowing to conservative demands for deeper spending cuts, the speaker is reneging on the same agreement, which allowed Congress to raise the debt ceiling and avoid a catastrophic default. “I’m not a fan of government shutdowns,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters yesterday. “I’ve seen a few of them over the years. They have never produced a policy change, and they’ve always been a loser for Republicans.”

    For now, McCarthy allies such as Armstrong are adamant that this spending battle must result in a change in administration policy. They have zeroed in on the border, seeing an opportunity to force Biden’s hand and take advantage of an issue on which even some Democrats, such as New York City Mayor Eric Adams, have been critical of the president. “If we can’t use this fight to deal with the single most pressing national-security issue and humanitarian issue of our time, then shame on us,” Armstrong said.

    Yet House Republicans have found themselves isolated, and bickering over legislation that—like most of their proposals this year—stands no chance of becoming law. A bipartisan majority in the Senate is likely to simply return a temporary spending bill to the House without the conservative priorities, perhaps with additional funding to aid Ukraine in its war with Russia. What then? I asked Armstrong. “I would shut it down,” he replied.

    Democrats in the House, meanwhile, have watched the unfolding GOP drama with a mix of schadenfreude and growing horror. The Republican infighting could help Democrats win back a House majority next year. But a shutdown would not reflect well on either party, and voters could end up blaming Biden as well as the GOP for the fallout. Hundreds of thousands of federal workers would be furloughed, and millions of Americans might have to wait longer for Social Security checks and other needed benefits. “The rest of the world looks at us like we’re incompetent and dysfunctional,” Representative Gerry Connolly, a Democrat whose Northern Virginia district includes thousands of federal workers, told me. “How do you explain to our European allies that we can’t fund our government?”

    Connolly is in his eighth term and, like America’s allies, has seen this brinkmanship play out several times before. He told me that whereas earlier in the month he thought Congress had a 50–50 chance of keeping the government open, he now puts the odds of a shutdown at 90 percent. “Sometimes you feel like we’re going to avert this cliff, and then there are times that you go, ‘No, we’re going off this cliff,’” Connolly said. “This one feels like we’re going off the cliff.”

    Russell Berman

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