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WASHINGTON – As Democratic lawmakers speak out against “inhumane treatment” of Black migrants at the southern border, senators from both sides remain divided on why Black people are underrepresented in immigration policy discussions, and how current policies are contributing to high rates of deportation and expulsion of Black immigrants.
“We haven’t had the narrative we need for immigration,” Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) told theGrio. “The communities that are directly impacted should be able to have their voices heard in developing the right immigration policy in this country. And quite frankly, we haven’t had that debate.”
Black people make up a little over 5% of unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. but over 10% of immigrants in the removal process, according to a joint letter addressed to President Joe Biden by several Democratic lawmakers such as Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and U.S. Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) on Wednesday condemning the harms against Black migrants.
“I think that a lot of folks if you mention immigration, they’re going to have a picture of a person and it might not be a Haitian or of somebody from Africa, they’re going to think immediately somebody from Latin America,” said Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) to theGrio. “Now there’s a lot of African Americans in Latin America, but I think it’s important if we talk about immigration for us to think broadly. So, I think that that’s helpful to educate all of us so that we are thinking about it across the spectrum.”
On this Black Immigrant Advocacy Day of Action, several Black immigration groups like UndocuBlack Network and Congressional Democrats led by Sen. Booker and Rep. Bush have been united on one common idea: Black migrants are suffering at the border. Title 42, which is part of a U.S. health code that gives the government the power to reign in immigration during a public health emergency, is a big reason why.
“The use of Title 42 deprives legitimate asylum seekers of their legal right to seek asylum and pursue their claims in the U.S., and its extended use has created unsafe conditions for vulnerable migrants, increased the number of dangerous border crossings and has prevented the Biden Administration from fulfilling its early commitment to restore access to asylum,” said Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), a signatory of the letter to Biden, in a statement to theGrio.
Former President Donald Trump used the code in a public health order that allowed the rapid expulsion of migrants due to concerns of spreading COVID-19. The American Immigration Council argues that this policy blocks asylum applicants from pleading their case when they enter the country.
Title 42 also made headlines after thousands of Haitian asylum applicants who crossed the southern border were expelled from the U.S. for the same reason...

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