Biden faces pressure as US sets new course on immigration
Read full article: Biden faces pressure as US sets new course on immigrationHonduran boys whose family wants to seek asylum in the U.S., play on the sidewalk in Tijuana, Mexico, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's possible even more may come after the Biden administration announced Friday that it would slowly allow an estimated 25,000 people to enter the U.S. as their cases are reviewed. Jon Feere, a senior adviser to ICE under Trump, said such moves are part of a larger pattern that the Biden administration will come to regret. He says he intended to seek asylum based on the dangers he faced as an environmental activist protesting illegal logging in Honduras. But because he can't seek asylum at the official border crossing in San Diego, other migrants told him about a place he could try to cross illegally.
Ex-Homeland Security official Mayorkas returns under Biden
Read full article: Ex-Homeland Security official Mayorkas returns under BidenBiden on Monday announced the nomination of Alejandro Mayorkas, who served under President Barack Obama as deputy secretary of homeland security and director of the Citizenship and Immigration Services. And he helped negotiate the first homeland security memorandum of understanding between the U.S. and Cuba, where he was born. If confirmed by the Senate, Mayorkas, who turns 61 on Tuesday, would be the first Hispanic and the first immigrant to lead DHS. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley and received his law degree from Loyola Law School. Bersin said Mayorkas is a “centrist” who will seek to balance humanitarian concerns with the need for border security.