POTUS to pursue an aggressive executive crackdown on immigration

Mexico won’t have to pay for the wall, after all. US taxpayers won’t have to pick up the tab, either. The controversial barrier, rather, will cover its own cost just by closing the border to illegal immigrants who tend to go on the federal dole.

That’s the finding of recent immigration studies showing the $18 billion wall President Trump plans to build along the southern border will pay for itself by curbing the importation of not only crime and drugs, but poverty.
“The wall could pay for itself even if it only modestly reduced illegal crossings and drug smuggling,” Steven A. Camarota, director of research at the Center for Immigration Studies, told The Post.
Federal data shows that a wall would work. A two-story corrugated metal fence in El Paso, Texas, first erected under the Bush administration has already curtailed illegal border crossings there by more than 89 percent over the five-year period during which it was built.
Absent a wall, the Homeland Security Department forecasts an additional 1.7 million illegal crossings at the US-Mexico border over the next decade.
If a wall stopped just 200,000 of those future crossings, Camarota says, it would pay for itself in fiscal savings from welfare, public education, refundable tax credits and other benefits currently given to low-income, illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central America.
If a wall stopped 50 percent of those expected crossings, he says, it would save American taxpayers a whopping $64 billion — almost four times the wall’s cost — to say nothing of the additional billions in federal savings from reduced federal drug interdiction and border-security enforcement.
Camarota explains that illegal border-crossers from Mexico and Central America — who account for more than 75 percent of the illegal immigrant population in the US — are overwhelmingly poor, uneducated and lack English language and other skills. In fact, the average Latino illegal immigrant has less than a 10th-grade education. That means if they work, they tend to make low wages; and as a result pay relatively little in taxes while using public services. And if they have children while in the US, they more often than not receive welfare benefits on behalf of those US-born children, who have the same welfare eligibility as any other citizen.
“A large share of the welfare used by immigrant households is received on behalf of their US-born children,” Camarota said. “This is especially true of households headed by illegal immigrants.”
Therefore, illegal border-crossers create an average fiscal burden of more than $72,000 during their lifetimes, Camarota says. Including costs for their US-born children, the fiscal drain jumps to more than $94,000.
While the national media routinely report that illegal immigrants don’t go on welfare, Camarota says this is a pervasive myth. While in most cases they can’t legally qualify for welfare, food stamps, Medicaid or other public benefits, the reality is that the vast majority of households headed by illegal immigrants are on welfare through their children.


“There is simply no question that households headed by illegal immigrants access a good deal of welfare. In fact, illegal immigrants’ use of some programs is quite high,” he said.
The US Census Bureau’s latest “survey of income and program participation” shows that 62 percent of illegal-immigrant-headed households are on the federal dole — more than double the rate for households headed by native-born Americans. And that includes households where one or more workers are present in the household.
Their use of US welfare is highest for food stamps and Medicaid, data show.
Though welfare use among illegal immigrants is much more associated with children, “childless illegal households still use some welfare programs at surprisingly high rates,” Camarota pointed out.
Some collect federal benefits through fraud or administrative errors or through green-card holders. But in the case of Medicaid, pregnant women illegally in the country can sometimes be enrolled in the program.
There is also an Emergency Medicaid program that covers predominantly illegal immigrants. Funds from the multibillion-dollar program go to hospitals to offset the cost of treating adult illegal aliens who can’t pay their bills. And it’s not just for ER visits. In New York, the program can be used to provide chemotherapy and radiation therapy for illegal immigrants.
In addition, Camarota said the IRS each year pays out billions to illegal immigrants in refundable child tax credits and the earned income tax credit.
While Democrats complain the $18 billion price tag for the Trump wall is too high, the “Dreamers” amnesty bill they want Trump and Republicans to pass in exchange for funding the wall (or ideally in spite of the wall) would cost US taxpayers even more than the construction of the border partition over 10 years.
“The cost of the DREAM Act has been estimated as very large — a $26 billion net cost in the first 10 years,” Camarota noted.

More at: https://nypost.com/2018/03/10/cutting-welfare-to-illegal-aliens-would-pay-for-trumps-wall/
 
trump660_090517123828.jpg


President Donald Trump arrives Monday in a country featuring the most Trump properties outside the U.S.

Trump visits a big foreign market — for the U.S. and for Trump Org
For three years, Trump has worked with India on trade. And for three years, Trump’s company has worked to promote its developments there.
Trump Tower in Mumbai still under construction in 2017
| AP Photo
By ANITA KUMAR
02/22/2020

Trump Jr is wooing India to make his real estate empire great again!
qz.com/india/1211991/donald-trump-jr-is-in-india-to-promote-his-real-estate-empire/


There is no indication that the two sets of headlines are connected.
MAGA team had made it very clear early on that they don't believe in quid pro quo when it comes to foreign governments seeking favors.


Children of H1B Visa Holders Can Get In-State Tuition Fee in New Jersey
Governor Phil Murphy of New Jersey signed legislation that allows the children of H1B Visa holders to qualify for the in-state tuition fees in higher education for ...
6 days



israel-770x433.png

India's Modi to sleep in Trump's bed in Israel

US approves more H-1B visas this year


Oct 14, 2019


  • US has approved a higher number of H-1B applications this year
  • 3.89 lakh applications were approved for the fiscal 2019, up from last year's 3.35 lakh
  • In past years, more than 70% of the aggregate H-1B visa applications for new jobs and visa extensions given to those born in India

Temporary relief to Indians in US! Work ban on H-1B visa holders' spouses pushed back till 2020

A 2015 rule issued by Barack Obama allowed work permits for certain categories of H-4 visa holders (dependent family members - spouse and children - of the H-1B visa holders), who otherwise could not be employed
September 19, 2019

Trump nominates Indian American to replace Kavanaugh
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is nominating administration official Neomi Rao to fill the appeals court seat previously held by Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
Trump said he was nominating Rao for the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit — sometimes referred to as the nation’s second-highest court.


US agency slows H-1B denials
PUNE: A US agency that administers the visa application process is denying fewer H-1B visas following stepped-up filing of lawsuits, immigration lawyers said.
Feb 25, 2020
Economic Time
 
Last edited:
A federal appeals court on Wednesday ruled that the Department of Justice (DOJ) could withhold funding from cities and states that refuse to cooperate with the Trump administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants.

A three-judge panel on the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously overturned a district court judge's ruling that the department lacked the authority to impose immigration-related conditions on certain funding.

The panel’s opinion, written by Judge Reena Raggi, found that Congress had delegated authority to the attorney general to set conditions on the federal grant program it had created, called the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program.

“Repeatedly and throughout its pronouncement of Byrne Program statutory requirements, Congress makes clear that a grant applicant demonstrates qualification by satisfying statutory requirements in such form and according to such rules as the Attorney General establishes,” wrote Raggi, who was appointed to the court by George W. Bush. “This confers considerable authority on the Attorney General.”

More at: https://thehill.com/regulation/cour...trump-administration-can-withhold-grants-from
 
[SIZE=+1]A Mexican Exodus Is Helping Shrink the Undocumented Population. The number of unauthorized residents in the United States is down to its lowest point in more than 15 years. Mexicans, Poles and South Koreans are all among those leaving.[/SIZE]

José cared for the bottle-fed babies, 700 of them in all. He knew a calf was healthy if her eyes were bright and her appetite hearty. Droopy ears were a bad sign. He was attuned to calf coughs. “His job was to do all things a mom would do to look after her young,” said Mary Kraft, who employed José and his brother, Juan, both undocumented immigrants from Mexico, for a decade at her Quail Ridge Dairy in Colorado.
Then about a year ago, the brothers informed Ms. Kraft that they were returning to Mexico. They had milked the land of opportunity and amassed enough savings to resume their lives back where they had started.
The pair are among a growing number of Mexicans who have been departing the United States in recent years, part of a reverse migration that has helped push the undocumented population to its lowest level in more than 15 years.
New data that will be released on Wednesday by the Center for Migration Studies shows there were 10.6 million immigrants living unlawfully in the United States in 2018 compared with 11.75 million in 2010, a decline propelled primarily by Mexicans returning south.
The issue of illegal immigration has become a centerpiece of the 2020 presidential campaign, as President Trump has stepped up deportations across the interior of the United States and further fortified the southwestern border against unauthorized entry.
Several Democratic candidates have called for decriminalizing border crossings; establishing pathways to citizenship for undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as children; and relying on technology, not more fencing, to enforce the border with Mexico. They have also expressed support for focusing deportation resources on removing immigrants who are a threat to public safety or convicted criminals.

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
 
Trump: U.S. Won’t Close Border With Mexico as Coronavirus Spreads

The president gave his assessment during a roundtable event at the National Institutes of Health on Tuesday.

By Paul D. Shinkman, Senior Writer, National Security March 3, 2020, at 3:58 p.m.

Trump: U.S. Won’t Close Mexican Border


President Donald Trump speaks during a briefing on the coronavirus at the National Institutes of Health Vaccine Research Center, March 3, 2020, in Bethesda, Md.(Evan Vucci/AP)

President Donald Trump on Tuesday said his administration likely would not try to close the southern U.S. border in a bid to contain the spread of the coronavirus, days after indicating that could be a possibility.



"We're not looking at that very strongly," Trump told reporters during a roundtable event at the National Institutes of Health Vaccine Research Center regarding the spread of the virus, which causes a disease known as COVID-19. "We haven't seen any great evidence of that area as a problem."

Trump turned to Anthony Fauci, director of NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and one of the most visible faces of the administration's response to the spread of the virus, who was sitting next to the president at the roundtable and appeared to agree with his assessment.

[ READ:
9 Dead in Washington from Coronavirus ]
The possibility that the U.S. would shutter its border with Mexico – halting transit that accounts for hundreds of billions of dollars worth of trade and hundreds of millions of legal crossings every year – followed reports over the weekend that the Trump administration would impose travel restrictions on Italy and South Korea. Those two countries currently have the greatest number of confirmed cases of coronavirus outside of China, where health officials believe the epidemic originated.
usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2020-03-03/trump-us-wont-close-border-with-mexico-as-coronavirus-spreads

[h=1]California county says person who died from coronavirus had recently taken cruise to Mexico[/h]By Christina Maxouris, Jason Hanna and Steve Almasy, CNN
Wed March 4, 2020
cnn.com/2020/03/04/health/us-coronavirus-update-wednesday/index.html
 
President Trump on Thursday said his administration will begin withholding funding from self-described sanctuary cities after a federal court ruled last week that it could do so.
"As per recent Federal Court ruling, the Federal Government will be withholding funds from Sanctuary Cities," Trump tweeted. "They should change their status and go non-Sanctuary. Do not protect criminals!"
As per recent Federal Court ruling, the Federal Government will be withholding funds from Sanctuary Cities. They should change their status and go non-Sanctuary. Do not protect criminals!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 5, 2020
The 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan ruled on Feb. 26 that the Department of Justice (DOJ) could withhold funding from cities and states that refuse to cooperate with the Trump administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants.

More at: https://thehill.com/homenews/admini...start-withholding-funds-from-sanctuary-cities
 
they need volunteers [MENTION=33245]TheTexan[/MENTION]

Maybe after my P100 mask arrives in the mail. It's probably not a good idea to be around Mexicans without a mask. Plus they might have coronavirus.
 
President Trump’s long-promised border wall is working.
The new chief of Border Patrol, which is under U.S. Customs and Border Protection, revealed that the parts of the new “wall system” are 90% “effective,” up from just 10% before it was built, replacing a ragtag of broken fencing.
“It changes everything,” said Chief Rodney Scott, of the 135-136 miles of new wall, roadways, and high-tech spyware. “There is a huge return on investment,” he added.
“This system is going to have a huge impact,” added Deputy Chief Raul Ortiz.
Border Wall System update:

▫️ 131 miles completed
▫️ 208 miles under construction
▫️ 414 miles in pre-construction pic.twitter.com/QdZVAdWRrj
— Chief Rodney Scott (@USBPChief) March 2, 2020


In the San Diego area, Scott said that the wall has essentially ended illegal crossings of humans and cars.
And, in an added benefit, it now requires 150 fewer border agents, a savings of $28 million in salaries and benefits, he said at a press briefing, his first since he and Ortiz took over CBP in January.
Plus, with a better border road, vehicles that once fell apart at 40,000-60,000 miles now last to 100,000 miles before they are auctioned off.
“There is return after return,” said Scott.
The wall is especially good at stopping trucks and cars, he said, because it takes too much time and effort to saw through several wall bollards needed to make an opening that is big enough to drive through.
“The border wall system all but stopped that completely,” he said.
As a result, drug cartels have changed tactics, building expensive tunnels and trying to sneak drugs in on vehicles passing through border entry points. But that isn’t effective, he said.
“It shut down that entire threat. Anywhere we built the border wall system, the first thing it does is shut off those drive-throughs. The second thing is, it shuts off massive amounts of people coming through at the same time. So, it’s forced the drug cartels, especially El Chapo’s group, Sinaloa, to shift tactics,” he said.

More at: https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...locks-90-of-illegal-crossings-up-from-just-10
 
Last edited:
The Trump administration announced Tuesday that it will be indefinitely extending the public health order it has used to seal the country's borders to unauthorized migrants, including asylum-seekers and unaccompanied children, during the coronavirus pandemic.

Authorities have used the directive to rapidly remove most border-crossers without proper documents to Mexico, Canada or their home countries and to bypass the immigration, asylum and anti-trafficking laws that govern the processing of migrants. More than 20,000 migrants were expelled from the U.S. southern border under the order in April and the last 11 days of March.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention directive, which invokes sweeping authorities in a 1944 public health law, was first issued in late March and renewed for another 30 days last month. On Tuesday, CDC Director Robert Redfield extended the order once again. But he did not include an end date and instead decreed the order would be reviewed every 30 days.

"(The order) shall remain in effect until I determine that the danger of further introduction of COVID-19 into the United States has ceased to be a serious danger to the public health," Redfield wrote in the 12-page document published Tuesday.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security also announced on Tuesday it would continue to ban non-essential travel through the country's land borders with Mexico and Canada. The restrictions do not prohibit commercial traffic or affect U.S. citizens and permanent residents.

More at: https://news.yahoo.com/u-extends-coronavirus-border-restrictions-002118020.html
 
Beginning this week, Mexican nationals arrested for crossing the border illegally will be flown to Mexico City instead of being dropped off at ports of entry.

As border restrictions were extended on Tuesday, U.S. Customs and Border Protection decided to alter its own policy. Now, instead of immediately being returned through border crossings, detained migrants will have to wait in custody up to three days before being flown all the way to Mexico City.

Border Patrol officials said the change in policy was needed to keep Mexican nationals from repeatedly trying to cross into the United States. According to CBP, at least one migrant had been expelled and caught as many as 10 times.

People from nations other than Mexico, were already being flown back to their countries of origin.

More at: https://www.borderreport.com/news/e...e-now-flying-illegal-crossers-to-mexico-city/
 
The Pentagon will put up to 4,000 troops at the U.S. southern border with Mexico from this October through September 2021, a move that will decrease the overall number of troops there while extending the mission another year.

“Secretary [Mark] Esper has approved a request for assistance from the Department of Homeland Security and authorized the deployment of up to 4,000 DOD personnel to the southern border,” Pentagon spokesman Army Lieutenant Colonel Christian Mitchell said Thursday.

As of late April, the total number of U.S. military forces deployed to the border was about 5,000, according to the U.S. Northern Command. The military is running more than 200 mobile surveillance sites along the southern U.S. border, in addition to assisting U.S. Border Patrol agents with logistics and transportation.

More at: https://www.voanews.com/usa/pentagon-will-deploy-4000-troops-southern-border-starting-october
 
The Trump administration is hiking the fees for a range of immigration benefits, including an 83% increase for petitions from green card holders seeking to become U.S. citizens and the first ever charge for asylum requests.

Set to be published in the federal government's journal of regulations on Monday, the new U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) fees will take effect on October 2. Roughly 97% of USCIS' budget is funded by application fees, unlike most other federal agencies, whose funds are appropriated by Congress.

The final rule includes a more than $500 increase in the fee for the form filed by immigrants to obtain U.S. citizenship — which among other benefits, allows them to vote. Fees for other forms, including for family members of victims of crimes who assisted law enforcement and for those seeking genealogy records, will also go up.

Some fee exceptions and waivers will be eliminated through the rule, which will also make the U.S. one of only a few countries in the world to charge a fee to apply for asylum, a humanitarian protection for those fleeing persecution based on race, political opinion, religion, nationality or membership in a "particular social group." By imposing a $50 charge for asylum petitions, the U.S. joins Fiji, Iran and Australia as the only countries requiring immigrants to pay a fee to seek legal refuge.

Applications for works permits, including for asylum-seekers, will also go up by 34%.

More at: https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-hike-fees-immigration-benefits-215300228.html
 
By next year, Donald Trump will have reduced legal immigration by 49% since becoming president.

The cuts to legal immigration have come in several categories, and it appears the Trump administration is not finished restricting immigration.

The National Foundation for American Policy projects that the number of legal immigrants will decline by 49% (or 581,845) between FY 2016 and FY 2021 due to Trump administration policies. (From the FY 2016 total of 1,183,505 down to 601,660 in FY 2021.) How did the Trump administration reduce legal immigration by 49% without changing U.S. immigration law? The answer is by using executive and administrative authorities, some of which are being challenged in court.

Below is a review of the impact of administration policies on legal immigration categories since Donald Trump became president.

Immediate Relatives of U.S. Citizens: The Immediate Relatives of U.S. Citizens category is projected to decline by over 50% between FY 2016 and FY 2021, meaning about 300,000 more spouses, children and parents of U.S. citizens would have been reunited in FY 2021 absent Trump administration policies.

The three policies most responsible for the decline are the travel ban against primarily Muslim countries, the April 22, 2020, presidential proclamation to prevent the entry of parents of U.S. citizens (and others) and the public charge rule designed primarily to prevent family immigration. “The new public charge rule will likely have two separate impacts on numbers, principally on the immediate relatives and the family preference categories,” according to Jeffrey Gorsky, senior counsel at Berry Appleman & Leiden and a former State Department attorney. Gorsky said in an interview the most direct impact will be increased refusals on public charge grounds. But he thinks the complicated rules and enormous amount of new documentation will slow processing. “That would result in fewer cases making it through the pipeline,” he said.

Refugees (including the Cuban Adjustment Act): The number of refugees gaining permanent residence (a green card) is expected to decline significantly from FY 2016 to FY 2021. Refugees apply for and usually receive permanent residence (a green card) a year after arriving in the United States, which means the number who become permanent residents lags a year or more. Annual refugee admissions are determined by the president, although according to press reports White House senior adviser Stephen Miller has, in effect, personally determined the number of refugees admitted each year.

For FY 2020, the Trump administration established an annual ceiling for refugees 84% lower than the final year of the Obama administration (from 110,000 down to 18,000), and as of July 17, 2020, only 7,848 refugees have arrived in the United States in FY 2020.

In its statistics, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) includes Cubans paroled into the United States who after waiting a year (or more) applied for and received permanent residence under the Cuban Adjustment Act. New Trump administration policies that affect Cubans and the continuation of certain Obama-era practices have reduced Cuban numbers.

Asylees: Like refugees, asylees receive permanent residence a year or more after approval. The Trump administration has prevented Central Americans from applying for asylum at the border and made many other changes expected to lower the number of asylum applicants approved each year.

Family-Sponsored Preferences: The April 22, 2020, presidential proclamation to “suspend” the entry of immigrants seemed designed to prevent the adult children and siblings of U.S. citizens and the spouses, minor children and adult unmarried children of lawful permanent residents from immigrating to America. About 94% of individuals sponsored in the family preference categories must enter the United States to immigrate (as opposed to adjust status inside the country). Although the April proclamation acts as a virtual bar on the entry of new immigrants in the family preference categories, the public charge rule, if applied, would also prevent many people from gaining permanent residence.

The suspension will likely continue indefinitely if Donald Trump wins reelection unless a judge rules the proclamation to be unlawful.

Employment-Based Preferences: “A spillover of unused numbers from FY 2020 family-based preferences will be used for the employment-based category in FY 2021 up to the highest recent level of adjustments of status, which was approximately 220,000 in FY 2005,” according to the National Foundation for American Policy analysis. “However, it is possible U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will not achieve that level of processing and legal immigration in FY 2021 will be lower, particularly given the financial difficulties experienced by USCIS.”

Diversity Visas: The Diversity Visa category, a target of the Trump administration, will be zeroed out so long as the suspension on new immigrants continues.

As the election nears, the Trump administration, under the guise of “merit-based” immigration, appears poised to enact other measures to reduce immigration. Currently, H-1B visa holders and many close relatives of U.S. citizens cannot come to America.

More at: https://www.forbes.com/sites/stuart...ts-by-half-and-hes-not-done-yet/#650855cb6168
 
Back
Top