Human Rights First: NGO Letter Urging DHS to Reject Use of Expedited Removal
Targeted News Service
To: Hon.
301 7th Street, SW,
Washington, DC 20528
Dear Secretary Mayorkas,
Department of Homeland Security (
DHS) to reject the use of expedited removal and immigration detention as it ends policies that effectively eliminated humanitarian protections at the border in violation of
U.S. law and treaty obligations. We reiterate our call for the administration to swiftly end dangerous and illegal expulsions under Title 42 and other policies that block and turn away people seeking
U.S. refugee protection at the border, as many of our groups have urged in separate letters. As
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Foreign Students Frustrated by OPT Visa Delays
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The Supreme Court on Tuesday dismissed challenges to Trump s public charge rule, a 2019 regulation denying green cards to immigrants if officials determine applicants may benefit from safety net programs, such as Section 8 rental assistance or food stamps. Biden rolled back some parts of the policy last month and directed federal agencies to study the impact of the broader Trump regulation by early April.
It marked at least the fourth time the justices have hit the brakes on major immigration litigation since Biden took office. In early February, the court canceled scheduled arguments about funding for Trump s border wall as well as his administration s remain in Mexico policy, which bars migrants seeking asylum from crossing the border.
Immigration was a scorching topic at the Supreme Court last year. With Trump gone, that s changed. John Fritze, USA TODAY UP NEXT
WASHINGTON – Less than two months after President Donald Trump left office immigration has fizzled as an issue at the Supreme Court, with major disputes that became conservative rallying cries largely vanishing from the court s docket.
After four years in which Trump placed immigration at the center of his domestic agenda, prompting dozens of legal battles, the cases now pending at the nation s highest court are more likely to have started under former President Barack Obama and to involve technical matters rather than big picture policy questions.