Oh Noes: Trump Squeezing “Immigrants” Out Of Jobs, Healthcare, And Housing

It’s so terrible! And the NY Times is big mad

Trump Squeezes Immigrants by Cutting Them Off From Jobs, Healthcare and Housing

For nearly three decades, Raquel Molina — an immigrant from El Salvador who has a valid Social Security number and permission to work in the United States — swabbed the toilets, wiped down the seats and vacuumed the aisles of airplanes at Boston’s Logan International Airport.

But last summer, Ms. Molina, 65, was abruptly fired from her $19.75-per-hour cleaning job, alongside dozens of other immigrants who have long legally worked at Logan. Her supervisor told her she no longer had clearance to enter secure areas at the airport. The Trump administration had decided that only U.S. citizens, green card holders and others with more permanent forms of residency should be granted access, according to a lawsuit that a labor union filed in federal court.

“I didn’t understand what was going on,” said Ms. Molina, who has been living legally in the United States under Temporary Protected Status, a humanitarian program that shelters people from troubled countries until they can safely return home. “I had worked hard at my job. This news put me in a state of shock.”

“Temporary” doesn’t mean almost 30 years. It means here temporarily then you leave. If you don’t want to go back to El Salvador, you can go elsewhere.

For more than a year, administration officials have sought to pull every bureaucratic lever possible to cut off immigrants — both documented and undocumented — from jobs, medical care, financial services, tax credits and even from enrolling their children in day care. The goal has been to compel immigrants to leave the country, and, in the long run, to eliminate incentives that draw many people to the United States in the first place.

Interestingly, if you are going through the citizenship process you have to prove you can take care of yourself. You don’t have access to government programs. Most on a work or student visa are not eligible, either.

The initiative underscores the president’s ability to reshape immigration policy through executive orders and the vast power of federal regulations while sidestepping Congress. And it shows how the administration has pursued more creative — and lower-profile — tactics after Mr. Trump’s militarized deportation raids into major cities prompted political backlash earlier this year.

Everything the Trump admin is doing is based on previously passed laws by duly elected Congresses. If Congress wanted to do something they could step in and pass laws.

The changes range from structural shifts in the immigration system to small-scale, regulatory tweaks taking away jobs or services from just a few thousand people like Ms. Molina. In her case, the administration no longer considered T.P.S. a form of “authorized residency,” said Justin Long, a spokesman for Customs and Border Protection, meaning Ms. Molina could not be “given official government credentials and granted unescorted access to secure airport areas.”

The U.S. is not the dumping ground for every sorry sack from around the world. Ms. Molina had a long time to apply for citizenship, or even permanent residency (why the f*** do we have people living in the US getting all the benefits as “permanent residents”?).

The administration’s strategy, along with the threat of arrest and imprisonment, has helped drive many immigrants underground, intimidating them from filing taxes, visiting doctors and even traveling. So far, more than 116,000 people without permanent legal status have voluntarily left the United States, including some through a government self-deportation program, according to internal Department of Homeland Security figures reviewed by The New York Times. Many others are believed to have departed without telling the government.

And boom, there it is: all this drives these people living off the backs of US citizens out of the country. I wonder how many went back to their home countries? And this keeps oh so many from trying to come to the US illegally.

But this year, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services proposed a rule that would effectively prevent people seeking asylum from receiving work permits. The move could be hugely consequential: Over the last fiscal year, more than two million asylum seekers received or renewed their permits, according to federal data.

Darn.

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One Response to “Oh Noes: Trump Squeezing “Immigrants” Out Of Jobs, Healthcare, And Housing”

  1. Alias says:

    Trump is squeezing EVERYONE out of jobs,housing, and healthcare.
    2 million Americans turn 21yo each year with or without college degrees there aren’t any good jobs for them

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