The REAL ID Act: A Radical And Misguided Approach To Immigration Reform
by Peter Schey
The more extreme anti-immigrant crowd in Congress is on the verge of winning a major a victory that will harm the national security, devastate immigrant and refugee families, and substantially increase the undocumented population living in the United States.
As with many other bad legislative ideas that are enacted under the radar without hearings where the merits of proposals can be discussed and evaluated, the REAL ID (H.R. 418) recently was endorsed by the House of Representatives without a single public hearing and is now on a fast track as a rider to an Emergency Supplemental Appropriations bill for Iraqi war and tsunami relief efforts to be voted on by the Senate in the coming days.
Passage by the House of the REAL ID Act is something akin to legislative vigilantism. International standards and this country's historic commitment to legitimate asylum seekers are abandoned in favor of harsh, irrational, and probably unconstitutional policies. Bounty hunters are encouraged to track down suspected undocumented migrants. Legitimate national security concerns are cast aside in favor of irrational xenophobic policies that scapegoat migrants for the crimes of terrorists.
There are many reasons why the Senate and the Conference Committee would be well advised to reject this radical and foolish proposal.
Cracking down on asylum seekers - REAL ID's solution to send innocent people back to their persecutors or have them join the ranks of undocumented migrants living in the U.S.
First, the REAL ID Act will deny refuge to those fleeing persecution by substantially heightening already stiff rules asylum-seekers must overcome to win relief from deportation. Rigorous rules have already greatly reduced the small size of successful asylum seekers in this country. In 2003, the most recent year for which the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) makes statistics available, only 15,470 migrants of all nationalities were granted asylum by the CIS. That was a major decrease in approved cases from the 25,773 granted in 2002, 28,689 in 2001, and 22,859 in 2000. The numbers of asylees granted lawful permanent resident status has also decreased substantially over recent years, with 44,927 cases approved in 2003, compared with 126,084 in 2002, 108,506 in 2002 and 65,941 in 2001.
The proponents of the REAL ID law will only be happy when these numbers approach zero. However, as virtually all migration experts understand, when people are fleeing persecution, torture, or death, insurmountable asylum laws on a country's books will not stop the migrants' flight to freedom. Instead, these migrants will simply live in undocumented status, glad to be alive even if they're living underground, surviving in a black market economy, and subject to exploitation in a multitude of ways. I have represented tens of thousands of asylum seekers in several class action lawsuits. Nevertheless, I have yet to meet an asylum seeker who studied U.S. asylum law before fleeing his or her persecutors and entering this country in search of safe haven.
The REAL ID will also violate binding obligations the United States has undertaken under several international instruments, including the United Nations Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees which provides, in part, that no state shall deport any person who owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.
The proposed restrictions on asylum seekers also likely violate the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man Articles XVIII (the right to an effective remedy) and XXVII (the right to asylum), the American Convention on Human Rights Articles 22(2),(7),(8) 24 and 25 (right to leave any country freely, to political asylum, equal treatment before the law and judicial protection), and the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights Articles 8, 13(2) and 14 (the rights to leave one's country freely, to seek asylum in other countries, to equal protection before the law, and to an effective remedy).
In terms of the fight against terrorism, there is no reason to believe any potential terrorist would ever come to the United States and seek asylum as his or her "ticket" into the country. It is unquestionably far easier for a potential terrorist to come enter this country as a tourist or foreign student. Asylum applicants must provide a wide range of detailed information about their backgrounds not required of applicants for other visas. It is also well known that asylum seekers are detained at our air and sea ports pending review of their cases. Terrorists are not looking for ways to be detained by the U.S. Government the moment they arrive here.
The notion that the national security is in any way served by making it more difficult than it already is to obtain asylum in this country is ludicrous. It will simply add to an already large population of undocumented migrants who live in this country without the Government knowing who they are, what they are doing, or where they live. That will obviously not help the nation's security in any way.
Cracking down on migrants freedom of speech -- Let's support dictatorships as a way of fighting terrorism
The REAL ID Act next aims its hammer at non-citizens who have the temerity to support liberation struggles in their home countries or make donations for things like tsunami relief to non-military social services groups that are linked to armed groups fighting to overthrow repressive regimes. Under the REAL ID Act, Nicaraguans who supported the U.S-backed "Contras" fighting to overthrow the Sandinista Government would all be tossed out of the United States. So would those who supported Nelson Mandela's African National Congress, or who sent money to a fund to win Mandela's freedom from a life sentence in prison.
This portion of the REAL ID Act is a real gift to dictators and repressive regimes all around the world. Many of the same anti-immigrant legislators who seek to ban migrants from supporting struggles for democracy in their home countries are the staunchest defenders of the Second Amendment's right to bear arms in the United States. They obviously agree that the use of arms in the American Revolution and other revolutions against repressive regimes throughout history were fully justified. They forget that even the preamble to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights recognizes the legitimacy of "rebellion against tyranny." Nevertheless, the REAL ID Act tells the world's repressive regimes and dictatorships that migrants fleeing to the United States will be prohibited on pain of deportation from in any way supporting those fighting to topple these regimes. Indeed, migrants will not even be permitted to support non-military groups providing social services to suffering communities if such groups have any links to groups engaged in armed struggles to overthrow brutal dictatorships.
This policy of course in no way helps the national security unless one believes that our security is somehow mysteriously enhanced by supporting dictatorships around the world. Indeed, support of repressive regimes, in this case by muzzling their opponents in the United States, may if anything encourage terrorist acts against the United States.
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