US court temporarily halts Trump’s ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy

The ruling deals the Trump administration a major setback, even if it proves temporary.

Asylum sign
A man holding a sign during a vigil for Salvadoran migrant Oscar Alberto Martinez Ramirez and his daughter Valeria, who drowned crossing the Rio Grande at the US-Mexico border, in Brownsville, Texas, US [File: Loren Elliott/Reuters]

A federal appeals court on Friday temporarily halted a Trump administration policy to make asylum seekers wait in Mexico while their cases wind through US immigration courts.

The same court decided to keep another major change on hold, one that denies asylum to anyone who enters the US irregularly from Mexico.

A three-judge panel of the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on the two policies that are central to President Donald Trump‘s asylum crackdown, dealing the administration a major setback, even if it proves temporary.

The question before the judges was whether to let the policies take effect during legal challenges.

The Trump administration has made asylum an increasingly remote possibility at a time when claims have soared. By 2017, the US had become the world’s top destination for people seeking asylum.

The “Remain in Mexico” policy, officially known as the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), took effect in January 2019 and nearly 60,000 people have been sent back to wait for hearings. The court declared the policy invalid, but acknowledged the ruling only applied to California and Arizona, the only border states in their jurisdiction.

The other measure with far-reaching consequences denies asylum to anyone who passes through another country on the way to the US border with Mexico without seeking protection there first. That policy took effect in September and is being challenged in a separate lawsuit.

Justice Department lawyers asserted that Trump was within his rights to impose the policies without Congress’s approval and that they would help deter asylum claims that lack merit.

Opponents, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), argued that the administration violated US law and obligations to international treaties by turning back people who will likely be persecuted because of their race, religion, nationality or political beliefs.

Judges William Fletcher and Richard Paez, who were both appointed by President Bill Clinton, sharply questioned government lawyers on “Remain in Mexico” during arguments October 1. They voted to block it.

Judge Ferdinand Fernandez, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan, dissented.

Supporters of the “Remain in Mexico” policy note it has prevented asylum seekers from being released in the United States with notices to appear in court, which they consider a major incentive for people to come.
Its expansion coincided with a sharp drop in Border Patrol arrests from a 13-year high in May. The Homeland Security Department called it “an indispensable tool” in an October 28 report.

Opponents say it has exposed asylum seekers to extreme danger in violent Mexican border cities while they wait for US court hearings. Human Rights First, an advocacy group that has criticised the policy, said in January that there were more than 800 public reports of rape, kidnapping, torture, and other violent crimes against asylum seekers who have been sent back to Mexico.

The policy was introduced at the border crossing in San Diego in January and initially focused on asylum seekers from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

It expanded to crossings in Calexico, California, and the Texas cities of El Paso, Eagle Pass, Laredo, Brownsville, and included more people from Spanish-speaking countries.

The administration on November 22 began busing asylum seekers who crossed the border in Arizona from Tucson to El Paso, Texas, to be returned from Mexico from there, extending the policy across every major corridor for irregular border crossings.

In Laredo and Brownsville, asylum seekers appear for hearings in tents on US Customs and Border Protection property, connected by video to judges in other locations.

Mexicans are exempt, as are unaccompanied children.

The asylum ban on anyone who crosses the border irregularly from Mexico also drew pointed questions from the judges during arguments. They asked whether the policy violated US law that says it does not matter how people enter the country.

The US Supreme Court declined to lift a ruling blocking the ban following an extraordinary spat last year between Trump and Chief Justice John Roberts.

The president denounced the judge who ruled against the ban as an “Obama judge”. Roberts said there was no such thing in a strongly worded statement defending judicial independence. Trump stood behind his comments.

Source: AP