Trump order temporarily limits U.S.
immigration during coronavirus crisis
02:25
WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump on Wednesday
ordered a temporary block on some foreigners from permanent residence in the
United States, saying he wanted to protect American workers and jobs during
the coronavirus pandemic.
U.S. President Donald
Trump addresses the daily coronavirus task force briefing at the White House
in Washington, U.S., April 21, 2020. Photo: Reuters
The order,
an election-year move likely to prove popular with his conservative base, is
to last for 60 days and then will be reviewed and possibly extended. It is
likely to face legal challenges.
Some critics
saw Republican Trump’s announcement as a move to take advantage of the
coronavirus crisis to implement a long-sought policy goal of barring more
immigrants in line with his “America first” platform.
“In order to
protect our great American workers I have just signed an executive order
temporarily suspending immigration into the United States. This will ensure
that unemployed Americans of all backgrounds will be first in line for jobs
as our economy reopens,” Trump said at his daily news conference about the
coronavirus at the White House.
He also said
it will “preserve our healthcare resources for American patients” afflicted
by the coronavirus.
Trump’s
order could block more than 20,000 people per month from obtaining a green
card of permanent residence, based on an analysis by the Washington-based
Migration Policy Institute.
However,
U.S. immigration services abroad and at home have largely come to a halt in
the pandemic, which may blunt the immediate effect of the order.
Democrats and
immigrant advocates have criticized the new policy as an attempt to distract
from Trump’s response to the pandemic. The United States has the most
confirmed cases and deaths in the world with at least 821,000 people infected
and at least 46,000 deaths, according to a Reuters tally.
The measure
would block immigration based on both employment and family ties, but not
affect guest workers who enter the United States on temporary visas, such as
farm workers and skilled workers in the H-1B visa program.
Doctors,
nurses and other healthcare professionals will be exempted, as will other
prospective immigrants coming to the country to perform “essential” work to
combat the new coronavirus, as determined by federal agencies.
The measure
also excludes immigrants applying for the EB-5 visa program, which allows
foreigners willing to invest in U.S. projects that create or preserve jobs to
obtain permanent residence.
The order
blocks the ability of relatives of U.S. citizens to seek permanent residence
through their familial connections, if those relatives are outside the United
States. But it makes an exception for spouses of U.S. citizens and unmarried
children under the age of 21.
Omar Jadwat,
director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Immigrants’ Rights Project,
said that while the order is limited in scope, it “will cause real pain for
families and employers across the country.”
White House
lawyers worked all day to craft the language for the order, prompting some
officials to say the signing might have to wait for Thursday. But aides
described Trump as eager to sign the document.
Trump won
the White House in 2016 in part on a promise to crack down on immigration and
has made the issue central to his presidency. But many of his major moves
trying to curb immigration have been challenged in court.
A person
familiar with the internal debate at the White House said Trump and his
advisers had discussed the executive order over the weekend and that the move
was directed at his electoral base.
“He’s wanted
this all along,” the person said. “But now under this pandemic he can
absolutely do it.”
Trump
signaled his intentions in a Twitter post on Monday and immigration attorneys
representing businesses argued it would only further depress the economy.
Michael
Clemens, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Center for Global
Development, said that a range of industries would be hurt including ones
that are critical during a public health emergency such as food processing,
warehousing, shipping, eldercare, childcare, communication and technology.
Many of
those jobs are filled by immigrants and the family members they reunite with
from abroad, he said.
Reuters
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