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Brnovich says 100-day pause of deportations violates agreement between DHS and Arizona

Brnovich says 100-day pause of deportations violates agreement between DHS and Arizona Rafael Carranza, Arizona Republic © Nick Oza/The Republic Migrants read a handout about new immigration law while the Migrant Protection Protocols expanded to Nogales, Sonora in early January. One month later, it remains tough to gauge is full impact on this border city as apprehensions continue dropping, but asylum seekers continue arriving. Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich is asking the federal government to rescind a 100-day moratorium on most deportations that was announced on President Joe Biden s first day in office.  In a letter sent Tuesday to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Brnovich claimed the moratorium violated the Sanctuary for Americans First Enactment, or SAFE, Agreement that the department signed with Arizona and other states during the final weeks of former President Donald Trump s administration.  

Biden s targeting of racist extremism is being portrayed as an attack on the right itself

Column: Biden seeks to change policy — and tone — on immigration

Biden to propose bill to legalize 11 million immigrants

Print During his first days in office, President-elect Joe Biden plans to send a groundbreaking legislative package to Congress to address the long-elusive goal of immigration reform, including what’s certain to be a controversial centerpiece: a pathway to citizenship for an estimated 11 million immigrants who are in the country without legal status, according to immigrant rights activists in communication with the Biden-Harris transition team. The bill also would provide a shorter pathway to citizenship for hundreds of thousands of people with temporary protected status and beneficiaries of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals who were brought to the U.S. as children, and probably also for certain front-line essential workers, vast numbers of whom are immigrants.

Biden to send Congress bill to legalize 11 million immigrants who lack documentation

Biden plans early legislation to offer legal status to 11 million immigrants without it Cindy Carcamo, Andrea Castillo, Molly O Toole © (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times) Immigrant advocates demonstrate outside a federal detention center in Los Angeles last year. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times) During his first days in office, President-elect Joe Biden plans to send a groundbreaking legislative package to Congress to address the long-elusive goal of immigration reform, including what s certain to be a controversial centerpiece: a pathway to citizenship for an estimated 11 million immigrants who are in the country without legal status, according to immigrant rights activists in communication with the Biden-Harris transition team.

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