DHS chief: Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua border arrivals fell nearly 90%

DHS chief: Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua border arrivals fell nearly 90%

Photo: Syra Ortiz-Blanes

 

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Monday defended the Biden administration’s new border policy designed to curb illegal border crossings in the face of a lawsuit from Florida and 19 other states challenging the program.

By AxiosRebecca Falconer

Jan 31, 2023

Why it matters: The states argue in the suit against the Department of Homeland Security that the program allowing up to 30,000 migrants a month from Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua to live and work in the U.S is an executive power overreach and in violation of federal immigration law.

Context: President Biden announced the policy that offers legal entry into the U.S. under humanitarian parole earlier this month as part of a carrot and stick approach to border crossings, per Axios’ Stef W. Kight.

What he’s saying: “We believe in the lawfulness of this program,” Mayorkas told reporters during a visit to Miami, per South Florida broadcaster WLRN-FM.

By the numbers: Preliminary numbers from January released last week indicate that “encounters of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans crossing unlawfully between ports of entry at the southwest border declined 97% compared to December,” per a Department of Homeland Security statement issued last week.

Read More: Axios – DHS chief: Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua border arrivals fell nearly 90%

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