• Latest
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
Congress mulls independent immigration courts as backlog soars

Congress mulls independent immigration courts as backlog soars

January 20, 2022
Joshua Williamson exits Robin in August

Joshua Williamson exits Robin in August

May 21, 2022
Hideo Kojima appears to respond to Norman Reedus’ Death Stranding 2 reveal

Hideo Kojima appears to respond to Norman Reedus’ Death Stranding 2 reveal

May 21, 2022
Batman, Nubia, Black Adam, Supergirl, Nightwing, and more ditch capes for swimsuits in August

Batman, Nubia, Black Adam, Supergirl, Nightwing, and more ditch capes for swimsuits in August

May 21, 2022
EA reportedly almost merged with NBC

EA reportedly almost merged with NBC

May 21, 2022
Bloodborne: Lady of the Lanterns expands the Souls-like universe with a new perspective

Bloodborne: Lady of the Lanterns expands the Souls-like universe with a new perspective

May 21, 2022
Ciao, Bellas! Kardashian-Jenners Celebrate Kravis’ Italian Wedding Weekend

Ciao, Bellas! Kardashian-Jenners Celebrate Kravis’ Italian Wedding Weekend

May 21, 2022
Celebrity Couples Who Got Married With a Prenup — and the Ones Who Didn’t

Celebrity Couples Who Got Married With a Prenup — and the Ones Who Didn’t

May 21, 2022
7 Stunning Sundresses at Walmart That Look Expensive — Starting at Just $16!

7 Stunning Sundresses at Walmart That Look Expensive — Starting at Just $16!

May 21, 2022
No. 1 Fan! Olivia Wilde Sweetly Supports BF Harry Styles’ Album Release

No. 1 Fan! Olivia Wilde Sweetly Supports BF Harry Styles’ Album Release

May 21, 2022
Olivia Wilde and Harry Styles’ Relationship Timeline

Olivia Wilde and Harry Styles’ Relationship Timeline

May 21, 2022

Hubble Looks at Curious Pair of Spiral Galaxies

May 21, 2022

Quetzalcoatlus and Other Giant Pterosaurs were Short-Range Flyers, Study Suggests

May 21, 2022
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Sunday, May 22, 2022
  • Login
  • Register
Live News Ghana
  • Home
  • NewsHot
    • All
    • Politics
    • World
    South Africa: What’s Happening In South African News

    South Africa: What’s Happening In South African News

    South Africa: What’s Happening In South African News

    South Africa: What’s Happening In South African News

    South Africa: What’s Happening In South African News

    South Africa: What’s Happening In South African News

    Africa: The Rise of Fake News in Côte d’Ivoire

    Africa: The Rise of Fake News in Côte d’Ivoire

    Morocco: Map Launches Map-Data, News Website Specialized in Data Journalism

    Morocco: Map Launches Map-Data, News Website Specialized in Data Journalism

    Zimbabwe: Gays and Lesbians Association Refutes Fake News On U.S.$300 000 Embassy Funding

    Zimbabwe: Gays and Lesbians Association Refutes Fake News On U.S.$300 000 Embassy Funding

    South Africa: Zuma’s Arrest Is Good News for the Rule of Law in South Africa

    South Africa: Zuma’s Arrest Is Good News for the Rule of Law in South Africa

    PAUL WEKEM KOTUAH CPP, WRITES, SECURITY THREATS WITHIN THE SAHEL (AFRICA SECURITY)

    Paul Wekem Kotuah At The Africa Security Conference.

    PAUL WEKEM KOTUAH CPP, WRITES, SECURITY THREATS WITHIN THE SAHEL (AFRICA SECURITY)

    PAUL WEKEM KOTUAH CPP, WRITES, SECURITY THREATS WITHIN THE SAHEL (AFRICA SECURITY)

    South Africa: Greenpeace Outraged By News That South Africa Won’t Support Global Plastic Ban Treaty

    South Africa: Greenpeace Outraged By News That South Africa Won’t Support Global Plastic Ban Treaty

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
  • Tech
    Africa: Nigerian Tech Startup Pricepally Tackles Rising Food Costs With Bulk-Buying Platform

    Africa: Nigerian Tech Startup Pricepally Tackles Rising Food Costs With Bulk-Buying Platform

    Trending Tags

    • Flat Earth
    • Sillicon Valley
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Golden Globes
    • Future of News
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Sports

    Hubble Looks at Curious Pair of Spiral Galaxies

    Quetzalcoatlus and Other Giant Pterosaurs were Short-Range Flyers, Study Suggests

    Rapid Global Warming is Driving Southern Yellow-Billed Hornbills to Local Extinction

    Solar Orbiter Sends Back Spectacular Images of the Sun

    13,000-Year-Old Red Ocher Quarry Found in Wyoming

    Study: Daily Cranberry Consumption Improves Episodic Memory and Neural Function in Older Adults

    20-Million-Year-Old Fossils Reveal Two New Cetacean Species

    CERN Physicists Directly Observe Fundamental Phenomenon in Quantum Chromodynamics

    Hubble Captures Stunning Image of Giant Elliptical Galaxy

    Researchers Sequence Genome of Oat

  • Lifestyle

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
  • Job Opening
No Result
View All Result
Live News Ghana
No Result
View All Result

Congress mulls independent immigration courts as backlog soars

4 months ago
in News Updates
4 min read
0
Congress mulls independent immigration courts as backlog soars
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

RelatedPosts

Joshua Williamson exits Robin in August

Hideo Kojima appears to respond to Norman Reedus’ Death Stranding 2 reveal

Batman, Nubia, Black Adam, Supergirl, Nightwing, and more ditch capes for swimsuits in August

House Democrats will hear testimony Thursday on the prospect of making the immigration court system — now housed within the Justice Department — independent.

The hearing by the House Judiciary Committee’s immigration panel will feature current and former immigration judges, as well as representatives from major bar associations. It comes amid the release of a new report that found the current immigration backlog is approaching 1.6 million cases.

The hearing also comes as the subcommittee’s chairwoman, Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., prepares to put forth legislation to revise the immigration court system. A committee staffer said Lofgren continues to work on the bill and did not provide a timeline for the legislation to be unveiled.

The immigration backlog has grown by more than 17 percent — or roughly 250,000 cases — since June 2021, when the case backlog stood at roughly 1.36 million, according to data released Tuesday by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a Syracuse University research center. The backlog grew by nearly 24 percent since December 2020, it found.

“This has been really persistent and accelerating,” said TRAC’s director, Susan Long. “Will that pace continue? I don’t have a crystal ball. But I don’t see anything on the horizon that’s going to change that either.” 

Mimi Tsankov, president of the immigration judges’ union and one of the hearing panelists, said she will address in her opening remarks the “root causes” of the challenges facing the immigration courts, including lengthy case backlogs.

She said the court structure within the DOJ creates an “inherent conflict” within the system, where immigration judges — intended to serve as neutral adjudicators — must answer to the U.S. attorney general, the political head of a law enforcement agency.

Changes in presidential administrations may also worsen the court’s growing case backlog as new government officials seek to make their mark, she said. Attorneys general may shape immigration law by rewriting immigration appellate decisions, which can force immigration cases to be relitigated under new case law.

Pulling the court system out of DOJ, and turning them into independent Article I courts, is the only “enduring solution,” Tsankov said.

“We really wouldn’t be having the goalposts changing on us every few years, which is what we’ve been dealing with,” she said. 

The Judiciary hearing will also feature testimony from two lawyers speaking on behalf of the American Bar Association and the Federal Bar Association. Both organizations have advocated in favor of remaking the immigration courts into independent Article I courts. 

But panelist Art Arthur, a former immigration judge and a fellow at the immigration restrictionist group, Center for Immigration Studies, said he plans to testify that making the immigration courts independent would aggravate the court backlog. 

He worried that yanking the court system out of DOJ would leave the system fighting for funding in a Congress increasingly divided over immigration. He pointed to funding battles for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which arrests and detains undocumented immigrants within country borders.

“You need look no further than the manner in which detention funding for ICE was restricted in past Congresses during the Trump administration to know that if that court makes decisions that people in Capitol Hill don’t like, that they will starve it for funding,” he said. 

“It’s almost as if you’re going to be orphaning the immigration courts if you take them out of that DOJ hierarchy,” Arthur added.

He instead plans to suggest creating an independent circuit court to handle immigration appeals, similar to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, to relieve the burden on the federal circuit courts. 

Not a partisan issue

An independent immigration court system has been a topic that has caught lawmakers’ eyes for years. Democrat and Republican-led committees have hosted at least two additional congressional meetings in the last half decade on the challenges facing the U.S. immigration courts.

In April 2018, the Senate Judiciary Committee’s immigration panel, then in Republican control and led by Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, held a hearing titled “Strengthening and Reforming America’s Immigration Court System.” 

And Lofgren oversaw a hearing in January 2020 on “Courts in Crisis: The State of Judicial Independence and Due Process in U.S. Immigration Courts.”

Both hearings also included remarks from Arthur and representatives from the American Bar Association and immigration judges’ union, formally known as the National Association of Immigration Judges.

Neither Arthur nor Tsankov view the immigration court debate as politically partisan. 

“Both sides should care about legitimizing the integrity of immigration court outcomes,” Tsankov said. 

Arthur agreed the topic is not a partisan one, but rather “a strictly constitutional issue and a practical one.”

However, the topic of immigration typically draws forceful rhetoric from opposite ends of the aisle. 

Thursday’s hearing follows the busiest fiscal year at the southwest border in recorded history with border agents logging more than 1.7 million encounters with migrants. The immigration courts have also seen increased numbers of asylum filings since 2016.

Republican lawmakers are likely to bring up the high numbers of arriving migrants at the southwest border, as they have in previous immigration hearings. 

The hearing also comes just weeks after the Justice Department resolved its ongoing fight with the immigration judges’ union. Under the Trump administration, DOJ successfully petitioned to decertify the decades-old union in a decision critics say was political. 

However, in December, the Biden administration reached a settlement with the union and agreed to recognize it as the collective bargaining agent for the nation’s immigration judges. 

Caroline Simon contributed to this report.

Read More

Tags: Congressmulls
Share196Tweet123Share49
Paul Wekem

Paul Wekem

Paul Wekem Ghanaian security specialist is well versed in managing and directing the implementation of security standards and policies including total integrated security solutions to optimize controls. He is proficient in the establishment and development of external relationships with stakeholders, negotiating and influencing at all levels

Related Posts

Congress to Vote on Saudi Arms Sales as it Commits War Crimes
News Updates

Congress to Vote on Saudi Arms Sales as it Commits War Crimes

by Paul Wekem
5 months ago
ATA, businesses ask Congress to expand telehealth options for workers
News Updates

ATA, businesses ask Congress to expand telehealth options for workers

by Paul Wekem
7 months ago
Punjab Congress issues whip for session, no-confidence motion unlikely today
News Updates

Punjab Congress issues whip for session, no-confidence motion unlikely today

by Paul Wekem
9 months ago
Load More
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Copyright © 2021 Live News Ghana.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • World
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2021 Live News Ghana.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version