Biden Admin Will Reinstate Tump’s Remain In Mexico Policy In November

A federal judge ordered the Biden administration to reinstate the policy in August after requests by the Texas and Missouri attorneys general, according to CBS News. The Biden administration criticized the “Remain in Mexico” policy that left 70,000 migrants who weren’t from Mexico to wait in Mexican border towns until their U.S. asylum hearings.

The Biden administration is now legally required to abide by the judge’s August order “in good faith,” though it is already considering an appeal seeking to end the policy once it goes back into effect, CBS News reported.

Compliance with the policy will likely start “sometime in mid-November” if Mexico agrees, a senior Biden administration official told reporters on Thursday. “That is conditional on Mexico’s independent decision whether or not to accept those that the United States seeks to enroll in (the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP)),” the official said, according to CBS News.

The administration is restructuring the MPP in order to comply with some of the Mexican government’s concerns and to treat migrants fairly, CBS News reported. Some of the changes include additional access to legal aid for migrants, a “general commitment” to work through court cases within six months a migrant going to Mexico and expanding asylum programs in order to help migrants who are too vulnerable to be returned to Mexican border towns.
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