Biden administration asks Supreme Court to let Title 42 border policy end

    Biden administration asks Supreme Court to let Title 42 border policy end

    Biden administration asks Supreme Court to let Trump-era immigration policy end

    Shawna Chen

    Photo of migrants lined up at a fence

    Immigrants seeking asylum turn themselves in to U.S. Border Patrol agents after wading across the Rio Grande to El Paso, Texas on Dec. 18, 2022. Photo: John Moore via Getty Images

    The Biden administration urged the Supreme Court Tuesday to let the Trump-era Title 42 border policy end as GOP-led states push to keep it in place — but requested a short pause on lifting it for operational reasons.

    Driving the news: Title 42, which allows the U.S. to expel migrants at the southern border without the chance for asylum, had been set to expire Wednesday before the Supreme Court temporarily halted its termination to consider taking up the case.

    • The coalition of Republican states has argued that the termination of Title 42 will cause “irreparable harm,” but the Department of Justice countered in its filing Tuesday that the states “assert no interests even arguably within the zone protected by Title 42.”
    • Their interest in avoiding “immigration consequences cannot justify extending a public-health measure that is no longer supported by public-health conditions.”

    What to watch: The administration, however, requested that the high court keep Title 42 in place until next week at the earliest.

    • “[T]he government respectfully requests that, if the Court denies the application before December 23, it leave the current administrative stay in place until 11:59 p.m. on December 27,” the court filing reads.
    • This would allow the government to prepare to return to pre-pandemic operations, “with new policies tailored to the consequences of the end of the Title 42 orders — a complex, multi-agency undertaking with policy, operational, and foreign relations dimensions,” per the filing.

    The big picture: The Biden administration has been seriously considering both expanding a parole program to Nicaraguans, Cubans and Haitians as well as imposing an asylum ban after the end of Title 42, as Axios previously reported.

    • The policy could remain in place for months if the legal dispute goes before the Supreme Court.

    Editor’s note: This story has been updated with details from the court filing.

    Go deeper

    Read More

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    3

    Private rental market faces £19bn EPC-upgrade bill

    Private rental market faces £19bn EPC-upgrade bill

    News The cost of getting private rental housing in England up to tougher EPC guidelines by 2025 is set to be around £19bn, new research by Hamptons on behalf of Bloomberg has revealed. The study, which analysed data from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, found that almost half of privately rented homes […]

    Read More
    Latent defects and appropriate remedial solutions

    Latent defects and appropriate remedial solutions

    News David Weare is a partner and Ian Smith is a senior associate at Fladgate LLP The recent decision in St James’s Oncology SPC Ltd v Lendlease Construction provides helpful guidance to PFI-project companies, design and build contractors, and employers generally when dealing with latent-defect claims. The case concerned a new oncology centre at Leeds […]

    Read More
    HS2 investigates slurry pool above Costain-Skanska tunnelling

    HS2 investigates slurry pool above Costain-Skanska tunnelling

    News An HS2 tunnel boring machine HS2 is investigating how a roughly 6 square metre pool of bubbling slurry emerged on a rugby pitch in Ruislip, north-west London. The brown foam emerged from the ground on Saturday (18 February), above a site where CSC – a joint venture between Costain, Skanska and Strabag – is […]

    Read More