The goal was to prevent illegal immigrants from making fraudulent asylum claims that gave them a pathway to await their court appearance while living in the US.
The “Remain in Mexico” program, officially known as the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), was first enforced in January 2019.
The goal was to prevent illegal immigrants from making fraudulent asylum claims that gave them a pathway to await their court appearance while living in the United States.
Until Oct. 29, 2021, Acting Secretary David Pekoske, and later DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas “repeatedly attempted to suspend or terminate the MPP Policy,” DHS said on Tuesday. “Following a series of legal actions, Secretary Mayorkas’s final attempt to terminate the MPP Policy was stayed by a federal court.”
The Department of Justice eventually dismissed the Biden administration’s appeal and submitted to keeping the MPP in place “for the foreseeable future.”
Since that statement, the crisis to which the DHS pointed to during the first Trump administration has escalated.
On his Inauguration Day, President Donald Trump declared a national emergency at the southern border, among other executive actions related to border security that he said would bring illegal entry to a stop.
Over the last four years under the Biden administration, the crisis has resulted in “widespread chaos and suffering,” he added.
The declaration states that due to the “gravity and emergency of this present danger,” the Armed Forces must assist the Department of Homeland Security “in obtaining full operational control of the southern border.”
Matthew Vadum and Darlene McCormick Sanchez contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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