The Biden administration is expected to keep the cap on refugees admitted to the country at 125,000 for the next fiscal year, which begins Sunday. Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Jerrold Nadler, both Democrats, said in a statement Wednesday the administration was keeping the cap the same. The administration consults with Congress on the number.
policy that the federal government has enacted for sometime now, which is intense on detouring people arriving on boats seeking asylum. the policy essentially states if you get this way, regardless of how just your claim to asylum, you will never be allowed, and people endure years in being detained in a facility like this often with very terrible stories to tell. it has been a subject of criticism from refugee advocates, and from here and around the world for many years, and it doesn t get this sort of spotlight and it is now doing so because it has a very famous celebrity guest in the hotel behind me. this hotel is not only detaining asylum seekers and refugees, and also the world s number one tennis player.
Iryna Volvach traveled from Ukraine to California on a tour package with a friend and decided to stay for a few months. When Russia invaded Ukraine, leaving her stuck in the U.S., she worried about her children and grandchildren back home.
Putin could attack Ukraine on Feb 16, Biden told allies politico.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from politico.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
when the united states withdrew from afghanistan. as you said, they point to stephen miller. top advisor to former president donald trump, who was known for his hard line views on immigration as the driving force for the slowdown of this process. now, one person described a 2018 white house meeting. during that meeting this person said that miller said, quote, what do you guys want? he went on to say a bunch of iraqs and sands across the country? this stunned officials who tried to convey to the trump administration that refugees are among the most vetted immigrants who come to the united states, particularly afghan allies who have worked along with u.s. troops and on behalf of the u.s. government and are vetted prior to that work. but still the suspicion of refugees by the trump administration stalled this already cumbersome process and led to a significant backlog that was inherited by the biden administration. as one former official told me, we lost time. now, refugee advocates and