In case you don't follow immigration obsessively, what this means: MPP was one of the worst abuses of the Trump Admin, keeping refugees from presenting themselves for asylum and separating thousands of families. MPP has led to 10-20k people at the border stuck in limbo. (THREAD)
Families stuck in MPP are living in shelters, on the street, in refugee tent cities on the bridge at the border, etc. And they were often denied a just process, not receiving information about legal proceedings, when they got anything at all.
Biden has made many campaign promises about reversing Trump's policies and a 100 day deportation moratorium, and immigration movement leaders have been watching closely and putting pressure to ensure this promise is kept -- and that a moratorium is put in place w/out time limit.
The end of entrants into MPP is a big first step in reversing the Trump policies, as is the big immigration related EOs. But there's going to be lots swirling around immigration in the coming days, so some things to keep your eyes peeled for:
Biden Admin has not yet issued a moratorium on deportations, 100 days or otherwise, which is an essential immigration demand to keep families together.
Biden Admin issued EOs today on Muslim Ban (migrants from different mostly Muslim countries can come back in!), the border wall (no more spending our money on that dumb wall!), and deportations (all immigrants are no longer priorities for deportation). The last one is VERY key.
DHS (the agency that administers immigration policies) now issues guidance as an agency that there will be no more new MPP cases. (GOOD!) It doesn't deal with existing MPP cases (complicated!) It doesn't mean new asylum seekers are allowed to apply at points of entry. (YET!)
So this is a big first step, but there's still lots to do around MPP specifically, asylum more broadly, and immigration. But this is a GREAT beginning. Here's what we need next:
-- new asylum rules in place
--new policies implemented by Customs and Border Patrol (CPB) so MPP asylum seekers can cross
--...all under COVID health screening protocols
So this *is* complicated AND the need is urgent. This is a key area to keep an 👀 on.
Biden Admin also issued an EO on DACA where they called on Congress to legislate Dreamer permanent protections (as opposed to temporary nature of executive action, important because of SCOTUS challenges!). This is somewhat in concert with the big "Day One" immigration bill.
Both of those need the support of Congress (specifically Schumer and Pelosi) to move forward in the legislative session. More on that bill here: vox.com/22233711/biden…
And here's Sen Durbin, chair of Judiciary (YAY!) and long time Dreamer Senate champion on a fast track bill for Dreamers: washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
So now its Congress' move on a bill, presumably someone will introduce the "Biden Day One" bill in the House and Senate, and carry that bill with the full support of the White House, who have committed to trying to get it passed.
AND I would say the other two big things I'm watching for:
👀: a deportation moratorium for 100 days (major campaign promise, that would be issued from DHS, not the WH). People want this now.
👀: re-opening the border (WH has indicated this will take "some time").
(sorry that was so long, a lot is happening in immigration these days!!! happy to answer any questions to the best of my ability)
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Have been wanting to demystify #DNCConvention for folks as we head into this week, so a thread on what a DNC Convention is, who runs it, and how it works....
The #DNCConvention is run by the DNCC, the Democratic Convention Committee. This is significant -- the DNC proper is a (somewhat) separate entity from the DNCC. Why? Because the nominee is often very deeply involved in the Convention.
The DNC proper typically picks the Convention city (that happens over a year in advance, is sort of like the Olympics where cities vie for a spot in a competition of sorts). This year's "Convention city" is technically Milwaukee. #DNCConvention
Political Data World, you are my last nerve today. Let's talk about anti-blackness in the Political Data community.
Honestly, part of me doesn't even need to do this thread so much as I just need to point out at you that one tweet led to a flurry of replies and some DMs from operatives of color. So.
The era of Big White Data (for my purposes, let's say roughly started in 2006 or so and is still ongoing) is inherently anti-Black. It was started to enforce "efficiency" around "cost per voter" and to maximize "persuasion vs. mobilization" resources.
I am extremely grumpy this morning so figured I would do some tweeting about staff diversity on presidential campaigns and potential senior staff in 2020. (What could go wrong?) (1/many)
The idea that presidential campaigns will become diverse on their own is ridiculous. 2020 races reflect the larger world in which they live and thus are not without racism, prejudice, unconscious bais, and discrimination.
A diverse campaign happens because the candidate and campaign manager make clear to senior staff who then build that commitment at every level of an org. Requires relentless pursuit of a goal of diversity over years of time and a truly ridiculous hiring pace.
THREAD: Let's say you haven't been following everything #KavanaughHearings related. Here's what you need to know: this guy is a liar and under no circumstances should he be a Supreme Court Justice.
Let me break this down because it's actually kind of astonishing the lengths Kavanaugh and Republicans have gone to conceal how right wing this guy really is. #StopKavanaugh
Republican fought to conceal secret emails that reveal his true feelings on #RoevWade. And how *does* he really feel about Roe? He believes the Supreme Court can overturn it. #StopKavanaugh
THREAD: This is what a 🇺🇸 United States of America 🇺🇸 looks like. 773 events in all 50 states, united because #FamiliesBelongTogether
Our smallest rally tomorrow is likely to be in North Dakota. Antler has a population of 27. #FamiliesBelongTogether
In 47 states, we have more than one event (and usually a LOT of events). The places with one event are Rhode Island, Puerto Rico and DC. #FamiliesBelongTogether
Are you confused about #WhereAreTheChildren? Of course you are. Your friendly immigrants’ rights advocate (reporting to you from vacation because the kids are counting on us to get this right). (THREAD)
“Did the government lose 1500 children that are now missing?”
...sort of. 1500 of the 7000 children who came here alone, mostly from Central America, are “missing” because the government couldn’t find them after they attempted to get in touch with them: pbs.org/wgbh/frontline…
Some ran away, some didn’t pick up the phone at their last known number. Some likely ended up in human trafficking. Some likely reunited with their families. We may never track them down.