Biden will fly in 30,000 migrants from Cuba, Nicaragua and Haiti every month

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President Joe Biden‘s immigration plan announced Thursday will allow up to 30,000 asylum seekers from Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Haiti into the country, while ‘rapidly’ expelling just as many back to Mexico if they illegally cross the border. 

In a lunchtime speech from the Roosevelt Room Thursday, Biden outlined the new plan and confirmed that he would be making his first border trip as president, visiting El Paso on Sunday ahead of the ‘three amigos’ summit in Mexico on Monday and Tuesday.  

‘We can’t stop people from making the journey. But we can require them to come here in an orderly way under U.S. law,’ Biden said.

The president explained that cell phone apps would be used to streamline the immigration process. 

Biden will fly in 30,000 migrants from Cuba, Nicaragua and Haiti every month

President Joe Biden announced a plan Thursday that will allow migrants to legally enter the U.S. through the air, hoping to cut down on the number of illegal border crossings

BIDEN’S PLAN TO ADDRESS HISTORIC MIGRANT CRISIS  

  • Accept 30,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela every month
  • Can come to the U.S. for two years if they are sponsored, have background checks and receive work authorization 
  • Expel migrants from those countries who try to cross the border illegally and impose a five-year ban on reentry
  • Individuals from Mexico and Panama will not be eligible for parole in the U.S.
  • Mexico has agreed to accept 30,000 expelled migrants a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela
  • Welcome 20,000 refugees from Latin America and Caribbean nations in 2023 and 2024 
  • Migrants will have to set up an appointment using a cell phone app for appointments at border entry points 
  • U.S. giving $23 million in humanitarian assistance to Mexico and Central America
  • Increasing funding available to border cities and those receiving an influx of migrants 
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Migrants making asylum claims will have to download an app called ‘CBPOne’ and make an appointment outside the country before showing up at a U.S. port of entry. 

Migrants can also use the U.S.’s parole program to have someone inside of the country sponsor them. 

They would then go through a background check, Biden explained, and if their application is approved they would use the same ‘CBPOne’ app and present that at a port of entry, including airports. 

They would be able to work in the U.S. legally for two years after that. 

‘That’s the process,’ Biden said. ‘But if their application is denied, or they attempt to cross into the United States unlawfully, they’ll be returned back to Mexico and will not be eligible for this program after that.’ 

The parole program was originally set up to deal with Venezuelan border crossers, but Biden announced it would be expanded to those fleeing Cuba, Nicaragua and Haiti. 

‘My message is this: If you’re trying to leave Cuba, Nicaragua or Haiti … do not, do not just show up at the border. Stay where you are and apply legally from there,’ Biden instructed. 

He also said that Mexico had agreed to take as many as 30,000 migrant border crossers back every month.  

President Joe Biden said Wednesday he hoped to see 'peace and security' if he visits the southern border next week, as he plans to make a speech on migration Thursday from the White House

President Joe Biden said Wednesday he hoped to see ‘peace and security’ if he visits the southern border next week, as he plans to make a speech on migration Thursday from the White House

Biden will meet with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Mexico after his long delayed trip to the U.S.-Mexico border Sunday.

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Biden said the delay was due to waiting to see how the courts would treat Title 42, the COVID-19 pandemic order that allowed for quick expulsion of migrants. 

‘I wanted to make sure that I knew what the outcome or at least the near outcome was on Title 42 before I went down,’ Biden said.

Last month, the Supreme Court blocked the lifting of Title 42, while the high court considers the case. 

Republican have called on Biden for months to make the trek. 

‘Republicans haven’t been serious about this at all, come on,’ the president said, when a reporter mentioned the GOP’s demand.  

Biden pushed Republicans – who took over the House majority on Tuesday, though are still without a speaker – to work with him to get new immigration laws passed.

‘We need more resources to secure the border, yet again extreme Republicans have said no,’ Biden complained. ‘But if the extreme Republicans continue to demagogue on this issue … I’m left with only one choice, to act on my own.’

Biden had teased a trip to the border Wednesday while traveling to and from Ohio and Kentucky to tout his bipartisan infrastructure law. 

‘That’s my intention, we’re working out the details now,’ he said on tarmac as he departed the Cincinnati area when asked if a border trip would be happening ahead of his trip to Mexico City. 

Upon landing at the White House he said he hoped to see ‘peace and security’ at the southern border. 

‘No, I’m going to see what is going on. I’m going to be making a speech tomorrow on border security and you’ll hear more about it tomorrow,’ he said. 

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