Washington — Citing the American government’s refusal to take in a group of desperate Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi Germany on the eve of World War II, a group of current asylum officers tasked with overseeing the controversial “Remain in Mexico” policy asked a federal appeals court in a surprising legal filing late Wednesday to block the Trump administration from implementing it.
The labor union representing thousands of asylum officers, Local 1924, filed the extraordinary court filing siding with plaintiffs seeking to prevent the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) from implementing the so-called “Remain in Mexico” program. Under the policy, officially called the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), migrants who claim asylum at U.S. ports of entry along the southern border are required to wait in Mexico while their cases are adjudicated in American immigration courts.In the filing to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals — which is reviewing the legal challenge to “Remain in Mexico” brought by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other plaintiffs — the union of asylum officers said the program violates U.S. and international law because it places asylum seekers in dangerous circumstances.
“By forcing a vulnerable population to return to a hostile territory where they are likely to face persecution, the MPP abandons our tradition of providing a safe haven to the persecuted and –– violates our international and domestic legal obligations,” the amicus brief read.Asylum officers, the filing argued, “should not be forced to honor departmental directives that are fundamentally contrary to the moral fabric of our Nation.”DHS did not immediately respond to CBS News’ request for comment.The remarkable rebuke of the “Remain in Mexico” policy by the very same civil servants carrying it out could prove to be a significant blow to the administration’s legal and political defense of the program, which the White House is betting on to curb an unprecedented surge in Central American families heading towards the U.S.-Mexico border.The Trump administration has begun to accelerate the “Remain in Mexico” policy in the three locations where officials are currently carrying it out: the California border cities of San Diego and Calexico and El Paso, Texas. Over approximately two weeks, U.S. authorities have turned back about 5,000 asylum seekers at these three ports of entry, bringing the total number of migrants returned to Mexico to more than 15,000, according to figures by the Mexican government.The administration is betting that the expansion will send a powerful message of deterrence to people in Central America considering undertaking the perilous journey north. Even if they arrive at the U.S. border and seek asylum, this line of reasoning goes, they will likely be forced to wait in Mexico for months while their cases are adjudicated. But the asylum officers said the recent filing that “Remain in Mexico” is “entirely unnecessary” and not designed to stem the current large-scale flow of migration from Central America. They argued the U.S. immigration system has been “tested time and again” and is capable of efficiently processing asylum claims if it has the adequate resources to do so.