Immigration
ICE officials say Biden ‘doesn’t have our backs’ as he appears to overhaul ICE’s mission

ICE officials report that they can’t do their job after the Biden administration’s efforts to scale back immigration enforcement policies. Some sources spoke to the Washington Post, which published the report Tuesday.
Under Biden’s presidency, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas shut down two immigration facilities, gave children and families exemptions to enter despite the pandemic and handed off unaccompanied migrant children to Human Health Services. As a result, border crossing attempts are at an all-time high, crime in border towns increased, and deportations are at a historic low.
Sources within ICE told the Washington Post that they’re afraid to be reprimanded if they make an arrest. “It’s a weird, frustrating time,” one ICE official said. “It feels like the administration doesn’t have our backs.”
Mayorkas has claimed in the past that he does not plan to reduce ICE staff.
Read the full article here.
You can follow Jenny Goldsberry on Twitter @jennyjournalism

Immigration
Biden Administration to allow 40,000 asylum-seekers per month into US with mobile app

Despite chaos at the border, the Biden administration is still pursuing expansion of a smart phone app which would allow nearly 40,000 asylum-seekers to enter the United States…per month.
“Starting in June, officials will allow more migrants waiting in Mexico to secure an appointment to enter the U.S. through a government phone app known as CBP One, which the Biden administration has transformed into the main gateway to the American asylum system” reports CBS News.
Department of Homeland Security Officials said border agents are preparing to distribute approximately 1,250 appointments per day, or 38,750 per month, to migrants in Mexico. They will then present themselves at ports of entry.
CBS News reports:
The CBP One app allows migrants north of Mexico City to request an appointment to appear at a southern border port of entry, where U.S. officials generally release them with an immigration court hearing in their respective destination. Migrants can fight their deportation in court by seeking asylum.
The app-powered system has been sharply criticized by migrant advocates, who say it penalizes the most destitute migrants who don’t have smartphones or an internet connection. They have also said the app does not allocate nearly enough spots to help the tens of thousands of migrants stranded in Mexico.
However, the app has facilitated “the largest expansion of migrant processing at ports of entry along the southern border in U.S. history” adds CBS News. “Since its use began in January, more than 120,000 migrants have secured appointments to enter the U.S. through CBP One, according to unpublished government figures.”
In addition to the CBP One process and the asylum restriction, the Biden Administration has begun allowing up to 30,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to fly to the U.S. directly per month if they have American sponsors. In just several months, that program received over 1.5 million applications.
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