When a foreign national illegally crosses the border into the US, he is typically taken into temporary custody, processed, and then given a court date and released. If, in the all-too-unlikely event that the illegal shows up for court, he may or may not be granted “relief,” that is, be granted asylum or otherwise officially be allowed to stay. If not, he can either leave voluntarily or be deported.
Even if deportation orders are filed, it might be years or never before he is actually removed. Currently, there are more than eight million persons under deportation orders still living in the US without any real fear of removal, because their cases have simply been dropped. The government offers the excuse that the immigration court system is so backed up (with about 3.5 million cases, three times the number of 2020) that they have to dismiss cases just to stay afloat. (Then why bring them in the first place?)
According to federal data analyzed by Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), under Biden, the deportation cases dropped has skyrocketed.
Thus far during the Biden administration, the proportion [of migrants] allowed to remain in this country has risen to 77 percent, and those ordered removed has been just 22 percent. While after the first year, grants of relief have risen sharply, many others have had their cases terminated without a decision on the merits of their asylum claim. These terminations have been part of this administration’s efforts to speed decisions on recent cases and close older cases that weren’t a threat to public safety or national security. [Emphasis added.]
Note that the administration is using its inaction as an excuse for further inaction. No one in Bidenworld wants to remove any potential Democrat voter. That should be clear to everyone at this point.
For more, see Breitbart News.