Election Day will be over by the time that this essay posts, but Americans may not know for days who the next President of the United States will be. Whoever wins the election will determine the border and immigration policy for the next four years.
Simon Hankinson, a senior research fellow in the Border Security and Immigration Center at The Heritage Foundation, gave his best “educated guesses as to what border and immigration policy would look like under either a Trump or Harris administration,” but he qualified his guesses by stating “but nothing is certain.” Hankinson “looked at what the candidates and parties actually said.”
The Republican Party platform of 2024, written after
Trump was the party’s nominee and with his obvious input, stresses “the
interests of American workers … over the claims of foreign nationals seeking
the same jobs.”
In its one-page Chapter 2 (of 10), the
platform says the priority should be to “secure our borders and all ports of
entry and to enforce our immigration laws.” For those who break those laws, it
continues, “we oppose any form of amnesty.”
Republicans believe the U.S. has been and
remains “a haven of refuge” but want to limit asylum to “cases of political,
ethnic, or religious persecution.” The platform warns that “refugees who cannot
be carefully vetted cannot be admitted to the country.”
In a second term, Trump likely would
pursue the same strategy as in his first term, albeit with improved tactics,
given some hard lessons learned in the first term….
Trump is often criticized by Harris for
opposing a supposedly bipartisan Senate border bill earlier this year. Most
Republicans rejected the bill because it would have locked into law
controversial Biden administration mass parole programs then allow up to 1.8
million inadmissible aliens to be released into the country each year while
they await their immigration hearings, which could be years down the road. (A
tougher Secure the Border Act of 2023 passed the House in May 2023 but was not
taken up by the Senate.) Here is Trump’s probable agenda for border action, in
three key points:
1. Reinstate the Migrant Protection
Protocols (also
known as “Remain in Mexico”) and Safe Third Country agreements….
2. Resume and ramp up enforcement of
immigration laws in
the interior of the country. Trump has spoke of the “largest deportation
program in American history.” …
3. Prioritize “merit-based immigration,” meaning that the
U.S. should select legal immigrants based on factors like youth, job skills,
and education and what they can contribute to the United States rather than
merely family relationships.
The Democratic
Party platform states, “We must secure our border and fix a broken
immigration system,” but credits President Joe Biden’s executive actions that “created
innovative legal pathways that … have decreased illegal border crossings.” This
is a reference, among other things, to Biden’s parole programs that allow
specific countries and classes of aliens to arrive illegally at U.S. borders
and airports, where they are then paroled in by Customs and Border Protection.
The
party platform states Democrats want to “reform the asylum system” by making
the process quicker…. It also proposes to “expand legal immigration” and
supports a “pathway [to legalization] for long-term undocumented individuals.”
As for
Harris, she has slowly clarified her stance on the border during her campaign.
It is difficult to distinguish her positions materially from the Biden
administration policies of the past four years….
Here
is Harris’s probable agenda for border action, in three key points:
1. At
the border – Current “lawful pathways,” including mass parole and mass
release into the country, would remain the policy at and between ports of
entry, presenting marginal impediments to illegal entry. Alternate methods like
the Welcome Corps of bringing in additional migrants – whether they qualify as
refugees or not – would likely be ramped up.
2.
Limited interior enforcement – Once aliens enter and
claim asylum, Harris (and current administration talking points) both say that “those
who are determined not to have a legal basis to remain should be quickly
removed.” But evidence from the past four years suggests that few aliens, once
allowed to enter, would be deported.
3.
Amnesty – Passing a law to legalize some or all illegal aliens is her
clear policy goal. If that is not possible, a Harris administration would fall
back on deferred or non-prosecution. Either way, most foreign nationals living
here illegally would be permitted to remain. An amnesty bill could contain some
procedural requirements, such as proving payment of taxes or proving no
criminal record, but a lack of these would not mean automatic deportation.
No
one knows for sure what either of the candidates would do if elected to be
President of the United States. However, we can look at their records and make
educated guesses. I expect a re-elected President Trump to do much the same as
he did during his first term, while expecting a President Harris to continue
most of the policies of the Biden-Harris administration.
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