Immigration

Mike Johnson says he expects courts to block Biden immigration order – as it happened


Republican House speaker Johnson says he expects courts to block Biden immigration order

Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House, is no fan of Joe Biden’s new order allowing undocumented spouses and children of US citizens to apply for permanent residency.

“Just two weeks ago, the President pretended to crack down on the open-border catastrophe by engaging an election-year border charade. Now he’s trying to play both sides and is granting amnesty to hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens,” Johnson said in a statement.

Here’s more:

The President may think our homeland security is some kind of game that he can try to use for political points, but Americans know this amnesty plan will only incentivize more illegal immigration and endanger Americans.

This is proof-positive of the Democrats’ plan to turn illegal aliens into voters. I fully expect this order, which is manifestly contrary to the Immigration and Naturalization Act, to be challenged and struck down in the courts.

Key events

Closing summary

Weeks after announcing periodic closures of the border with Mexico to stop new asylum seekers from entering the United States, Joe Biden today debuted a policy that will allow undocumented spouses and children of US citizens to apply for permanent residency. The president’s Republican foes pounced on the rule, with Donald Trump saying it amounts to “mass amnesty” for undocumented people, and congressional Republicans vowing investigations. Speaking of Congress, Senate Democrats are expected to later today attempt to pass legislation that will ban “bump stocks”, the device that allows firearms to fire rapidly, which the supreme court decided can remain on the market last week. Republicans are expected to block the measure.

Here’s what else happened today:

  • Biden argued it was possible to both secure the border and promote immigration in a speech at the White House.

  • Matt Gaetz, a rightwing Republican congressman perhaps best known for leading the ouster of Kevin McCarthy as speaker of the House, is under ethics committee investigation for alleged drug use and sexual misconduct.

  • Trump’s plans to address immigration involve mass deportations that strain the limits of the US law.

  • Henry Cuellar, the Democratic congressman who has been indicted on bribery charges, cheered Biden’s new rules for undocumented spouses and children.

  • New York’s state supreme court declined to hear Trump’s appeal of the gag order imposed by the judge in his business fraud case, which saw him convicted of 34 felonies.

As he concluded his speech, Joe Biden said he believe it is possible to simultaneously secure the border and allow immigrants to flourish in the United States.

“The Statue of Liberty is not some relic of American history. It still stands for who we are. But I also refuse to believe that for us to continue to be America that embraces immigration, we have to give up securing our border. They’re false choices. We can both secure the border and provide legal pathways to citizenship. We have to acknowledge that the patience of goodwill the American people is being tested by their fears at the border. They don’t understand a lot of it,” Biden said.

He then laid into Donald Trump for some of his recent rhetoric against immigrants:

These are the fears my predecessor is trying to play on when he says immigrants, in his words, are poisoning the blood of the country. When he calls immigrants, in his words, animals.

When he was president, he separated families and children at the border, and now he’s proposing to rip spouses and children from their families and homes and communities and place them in detention camps. He’s actually saying these things. It’s hard to believe it’s being said, but he’s actually saying these things out loud, and it’s outrageous.

Biden calls new policy a ‘common-sense fix’ for mixed-status families

Joe Biden said he intended to address the plight of families with mixed immigration statuses with his new order allowing undocumented spouses and children of US citizens to receive permanent residency.

Under the current procedure, undocumented people have to leave the country to apply for visas, with no guarantee they’ll get back in, Biden said.

“So, they stay in America, but in the shadows, living in constant fear of deportation without the ability to legally work all this, even though, under the law today, they’re eligible for long term legal status,” Biden said.

He continued:

Today, I’m announcing a common-sense fix to streamline the process for obtaining legal status for immigrants married to American citizens who live here and lived here for a long time.

For those wives or husbands and their children who have lived in America for a decade or more but are undocumented, this action will allow them to file a paperwork for legal status in the United States, allow them to work while they remain with their families in the United States.

Let’s be clear, this action still requires undocumented spouses to file all required legal paperwork to remain the United States, requires them to pass a criminal background check, and it doesn’t apply to anyone trying to come here today.

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Joe Biden is now at the podium, and recounted his recent actions on immigration, while taking a shot at Donald Trump.

The president talked about his new policies to temporarily shut the border to asylum seekers, while saying Trump scuttled immigration reform legislation in Congress “for pathetic and petty reasons”.

“Since we implemented my order, encounters have dropped 25% at the border, and we’re seeing the lowest number we’ve seen a long time,” Biden said.

He then acknowledged that “many people in this room also had concerns about the steps I’d taken,” but said he had no choice:

As President, I had to take these actions. Every nation must secure his borders, just that simple. And if Trump and the Republicans wouldn’t do it, working with me, then I would do it on my own, and I did at the time. I took these steps to secure the border.

Up next was Javier Quiroz Castro, a Daca recipient who said his wife and children are US citizens.

Such mixed-status families are in exactly the sort of situation Joe Biden’s new policy is intended to address.

“His actions today will prevent hundreds of thousands of families like mine across America from being torn apart, allowing us to continue to contribute to our communities and build a brighter, bigger future for our children,” Castro said.

The White House celebration of Daca’s 12 anniversary has begun.

Jill Biden is at the podium, with her husband standing beside her.

“Who knows the possibility of a dream better than those who traveled miles just to find it?” Biden said.

“I’ve seen it over and over again in my community, college students, immigrants and refugees, first-generation Americans who take nothing for granted. They show up, they don’t complain, and they only ask for one thing in return, the chance to work hard and build a good life for themselves and for their families. That’s the promise of America.”

Donald Trump has railed against the gag order imposed on him in New York, where a jury last month convicted him on 34 felony business fraud charges. But as the Guardian’s Edward Helmore reports, he is not having much luck getting it withdrawn:

Donald Trump has lost one of two legal efforts to terminate a gag order imposed on the former president during his “hush-money” trial in New York on accounting fraud charges.

On Tuesday, New York’s state supreme court said it declined to hear Trump’s appeal against the gag order in the case involving Stormy Daniels that led to his conviction on 34 felonies, asserting that “no substantial constitutional question is directly involved”.

Trump’s lawyers had argued that the case presents “substantial constitutional questions of the highest importance”, in part because it includes no post-decision termination date.

“This gag order restricts President Trump’s core political speech on matters of central importance at the height of his presidential campaign … and thus it violates the fundamental right of every American voter to hear from … [a] candidate for president on matters of enormous public importance,” his attorneys wrote.

Biden to celebrate 12th anniversary of Daca amid immigration turmoil

We’re a few minutes away from the scheduled start time of a White House event where Joe Biden will celebrate the 12th anniversary of Daca, the program created by Barack Obama that allows undocumented people brought to the country as children to work and study in the United States.

That program, conceived by the Obama administration in response to the deadlock in Congress over immigration reform that persists to this day, has served 800,000 people since its implementation, but also faced legal challenges. Last month, the Biden administration allowed its participants to buy health insurance on the exchanges created by the Affordable Care Act:

Republican House speaker Johnson says he expects courts to block Biden immigration order

Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House, is no fan of Joe Biden’s new order allowing undocumented spouses and children of US citizens to apply for permanent residency.

“Just two weeks ago, the President pretended to crack down on the open-border catastrophe by engaging an election-year border charade. Now he’s trying to play both sides and is granting amnesty to hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens,” Johnson said in a statement.

Here’s more:

The President may think our homeland security is some kind of game that he can try to use for political points, but Americans know this amnesty plan will only incentivize more illegal immigration and endanger Americans.

This is proof-positive of the Democrats’ plan to turn illegal aliens into voters. I fully expect this order, which is manifestly contrary to the Immigration and Naturalization Act, to be challenged and struck down in the courts.

A proposal from California’s Democratic governor Gavin Newsom to change the US constitution to fight gun violence has not gotten far. The Guardian’s Abené Clayton explains the reasons why:

As US courts roll back gun safety legislation and states expand gun rights, Gavin Newsom is pursuing an unprecedented long-shot effort to curb gun violence: a new constitutional amendment.

The deeply entrenched national gun culture and political divisions in the US has been a roadblock to establishing federal and state policies that would address the epidemic of gun violence in the US, which left nearly 43,000 people dead in 2023.

One way around this perennial stalemate is to pass an amendment. Last year, the California governor announced his plan to pass a 28th amendment aimed at enshrining safety measures that are supported by most Americans but haven’t been enacted by Congress and some Republican-led states.

The proposed amendment includes raising the federal age to buy a gun from 18 to 21, banning so-called assault weapons and mandating universal background checks and a waiting period between the purchase of a gun and its delivery.

A sharp and personal disagreement has broken out between two senators over “bump stocks” and whether they should be banned, the Guardian’s Edward Helmore reports:

Political ripples from the supreme court’s decision to overturn a Trump White House-era ban on sales of “bump stocks” – a spring-loaded stock that uses recoil to in effect turn a semi-automatic firearm into a machine gun – continued to radiate on Monday when Jacky Rosen took exception to comments on the issue made by his Republican colleague JD Vance.

Vance, the Ohio senator and potential vice-presidential pick as Trump seeks a second presidency in November had dismissed efforts by senior Democrats, including Chuck Schumer, the Senate majority leader, to pass legislation banning the devices as “a huge distraction”.

Vance went further. “What is the real gun violence problem in this country, and are we legislating in a way that solves fake problems? Or solves real problems?” Vance said, before adding: “My very strong suspicion is that the Schumer legislation is aimed at a PR problem, not something that’s going to meaningfully reduce gun violence in this country.”

Rosen, the Democratic senator, hit back, facing re-election this year in politically purple Nevada, the site of the 2017 Las Vegas concert shooting that killed 58 and prompted Trump to ban the rapid-fire device.

“This is not a fake problem,” she told reporters. “Let him come to Las Vegas. Let him see the memorial for those people who died. Let him talk to those families. It’s not a fake problem. Those families are dead.”

The day so far

Weeks after announcing periodic closures of the border with Mexico to stop new asylum seekers from entering the United States, Joe Biden today announced a policy that will allow undocumented spouses and children of US citizens to apply for permanent residency. The president’s Republican foes pounced on the new policy, with Donald Trump saying that it amounts to “mass amnesty” for undocumented people, and congressional Republicans vowing investigations. Speaking of Congress, Senate Democrats are expected to later today attempt to pass legislation that will ban “bump stocks”, the device that allows firearms to fire rapidly, which the supreme court decided can remain on the market last week. Republicans are expected to block the measure.

Here’s what else is going on:

  • Matt Gaetz, a rightwing Republican congressman perhaps best known for leading the ouster of Kevin McCarthy as speaker of the House, is under ethics committee investigation for alleged drug use and sexual misconduct.

  • Trump’s plans to address immigration involve mass deportations that strain the limits of the US law.

  • Henry Cuellar, the Democratic congressman who has been indicted on bribery charges, cheered Biden’s new rules for undocumented spouses and children.

Schumer says Senate Democrats will make likely quixotic attempt to pass ‘bump stock’ ban today

Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer said Democrats will attempt to pass a ban on “bump stock” firearm modifications today, but acknowledged the GOP is likely to block the measure.

The supreme court’s conservative majority last week overturned a ban on the devices implemented by the Trump administration following a mass shooting in Las Vegas that was the deadliest in American history. In remarks on the Senate floor, Schumer characterized the new attempt to keep the modifications off the market as a matter of saving lives.

“What today’s bill does is return things to the status quo set by Donald Trump, saying bump stocks are dangerous and should be prohibited. Senate Republicans by and large supported Donald Trump’s ban on bump stocks back then, so they should support this bill today,” Schumer said.

He continued:

But sadly, some of our colleagues on the other side are making it clear they will ignore the immense worry most Americans have about gun violence and they will block today’s bill. Some on the other side say this bill is political theatre, that is does nothing, that it’s a stunt. Go tell families who lost loved ones that this is a stunt. Go tell the many who have recovered from injuries that this is a stunt.

Are my Republican colleagues serious? Do they really think banning bump stocks is some kind of stunt? Again, they should tell that to the people of Nevada who have dead relatives because of bump stocks.

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