Friday, 30 August 2024
Jamaica: Third Reviews Under the Arrangement Under the Precautionary and Liquidity Line and the Arrangement Under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility-Press Release and Staff Report
Published August 30, 2024 at 07:00AM
Read more at imf.org
ACLU: What Kamala Harris Must Do to End Abuse in the Criminal Legal System
If elected president, Vice President Kamala Harris would bring extensive experience to the role from her work in the criminal legal system as district attorney, attorney general, senator and vice president. In these roles, her commitment to reforming the criminal legal system has been mixed. In some areas she has taken positions that have embraced reform, while in other areas she has taken positions that were contrary to reform — including instances where she missed the opportunity to end practices that helped drive mass incarceration.
The ACLU urges Harris to follow the lead of her running mate, Tim Walz, who has been a pioneer for criminal legal system reform in his home state of Minnesota.
Learn more in our breakdown.
Harris on the Criminal Legal System
The Facts: A Harris administration has the opportunity to make the criminal legal system more just and humane for all by renouncing failed policies that drove mass incarceration and racial disparities.
Importantly, in 2022, President Joe Biden issued an executive order on policing that changed the use of force standard for federal law enforcement, restricted the distribution of military equipment to local law enforcement, restricted the use of deadly chokeholds and carotid restraints, and created a national police misconduct registry. In the absence of congressional action, a potential Harris administration should continue the important work of implementing Biden’s policing executive order.
A Harris administration should also expand efforts to end federal mandatory sentencing minimums, which require federal judges to impose a required sentence — sometimes as much as five years, 10 years, or 20 years, or even a mandatory life in prison sentence — regardless of the case's specific facts or the circumstances of the person sentenced. A Harris administration should appoint an attorney general committed to ending this harsh practice and implementing other critical reforms that would change the system for the better.
The Harris administration can also push for passage legislative proposals such as the Justice Safety Valve Act, which Harris co-sponsored in the past. The legislation would give federal judges the discretion to sentence below the mandatory minimum sentence. The Harris administration could also push for passage of the EQUAL Act, which the ACLU strongly supports. This bipartisan bill would end the sentencing disparities between crack and powder cocaine that has resulted in racially disproportionate arrests, prosecutions, and federal imprisonment of Black and Brown people. Lastly, in 2019, Harris introduced the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act of 2019. The legislation would have decriminalized marijuana at the federal level and made the de-scheduling of marijuana retroactive. The ACLU supports the aims of the MORE Act and allows states to undo the harms of the war on drugs.
Why It Matters: Right now, the U.S. criminal legal systems hold more than 1.9 million people in prisons, detention centers, jails and other carceral systems. Racial discrimination within these systems mean that police encounters disproportionately impact Black and Brown people, and can escalate into violent encounters or death. Currently, the burdens of petty drug-related charges, steep criminal fines or fees and unfair sentencing is also predominantly borne by Black and Brown communities, fueling a vicious cycle of poverty and criminalization.
At the ACLU, we believe everyone deserves dignity, fairness, and an opportunity to thrive. That includes people suspected, accused, or convicted of a crime. We seek to limit the harm and reach of the criminal legal system and transform our approach to safety to a system focused on prevention, not punishment. But we can’t do it alone. The executive branch has a vital role to play in realizing this vision.
How We Got Here: Harris brings extensive experience working in the criminal legal system to the White House. As a senator, Harris co-wrote and was one of the lead sponsors of the Justice in Policing Act of 2020, the most significant police reform bill to gain traction in the U.S. Senate after the murder of George Floyd in 2020. In response to the ACLU’s federal advocacy and other efforts, the most recent introduction of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in the Senate included grants for mental health crisis response programs and unarmed civilian government departments to enforce traffic violations. Harris has continued to be a proponent of police reform and accountability in her current role, recently applauding the development of a national non-public police misconduct registry for hiring federal law enforcement, and calling for the passage of the Justice in Policing Act.
Additionally, in the wake of the Trump administration’s execution spree, which killed 13 people, the Biden-Harris administration ordered, through Attorney General Merrick Garland, a halt to any future federal executions and a review of the federal execution process. Over the course of her career, Harris has fluctuated on the death penalty. If elected, the ACLU will call on Harris to suspend federal executions, approve broad grants of clemency to those on federal death row, and work for the abolition of the federal death penalty.
Our Roadmap: The ACLU will push the Harris administration to expand progressive reform efforts and challenge draconian approaches to criminal legal policy.
The ACLU will demand that Congress enact key legislation to ensure a fair and just criminal legal system, some of which were championed by Harris when she was in the U.S. Senate. This includes an improved George Floyd Justice in Policing Act to ensure accountability for police misconduct; marijuana reform to begin to address the harmful impact of the war on drugs; the Driving for Opportunity Act to reduce police interaction and the commensurate risk of harm; the Mental Health Justice Act to provide non-law- enforcement responses to mental health crises; the EQUAL Act to remove sentencing disparities between crack and powder cocaine; and the End Solitary Confinement Act to limit solitary confinement in federal facilities.
Additionally, the ACLU will continue our advocacy for legislation to repeal the federal death penalty, end mandatory minimum sentences, abolish the doctrine of qualified immunity, and stop the 1033 transfer of military weapons program. We will push a potential Harris administration to end extreme sentencing practices that fuel mass incarceration and abolish the death penalty once and for all. We will urge the administration to continue and fully implement the Biden administration’s charging policies that equalize sentencing outcomes for crack and cocaine offenses and that minimize the application of mandatory minimums.
The ACLU is hopeful that Harris will create an administration that is responsive to calls for a continued suspension of federal executions, broad grants of clemency to those on federal death row, and abolition of the federal death penalty. The ACLU will also continue our critical litigation that puts the death penalty “on trial” in the states, invalidating the death penalty based on its racist administration, including in the selection of juries.
What Our Experts Say: “I served as a public defender during the same period in our country's history that Vice President Harris worked as a prosecutor, and I know she witnessed, first hand, systemic injustices in our criminal legal system that need to be addressed immediately. We hope that if elected, Harris will use this insight to bring about transformative changes, including protecting people from police abuse, ending extreme and unjust sentencing, addressing the inhumane conditions in jails and prisons, and abolishing the federal death penalty — moving the country toward ending this inhumane practice once and for all.” — Yasmin Cader, deputy legal director and director of the ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice and Equality
“The ACLU will demand that Harris recommit to the legislative agenda that she championed as a senator. But Harris cannot wait on Congress to act: She must use her executive authority to end extreme sentencing, halt federal executions, and vastly expand the number of people granted clemency. The ACLU will continue to fight for a criminal legal system that is humane and just.” — Cynthia W. Roseberry, ACLU director of policy and government affairs
What You Can Do Today: Unchecked, unaccountable policing harms us all. Yet police continue to experience broad immunity, job security even with a pattern of misconduct, and a steady supply of war equipment directly from the Pentagon. The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act addresses these issues by helping to end racial profiling, to create real accountability for police, and to rein in police violence. Urge your representatives to pass this bill now.
Published August 30, 2024 at 09:30PM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/oDfKnHe
ACLU: What Kamala Harris Must Do to End Abuse in the Criminal Legal System
If elected president, Vice President Kamala Harris would bring extensive experience to the role from her work in the criminal legal system as district attorney, attorney general, senator and vice president. In these roles, her commitment to reforming the criminal legal system has been mixed. In some areas she has taken positions that have embraced reform, while in other areas she has taken positions that were contrary to reform — including instances where she missed the opportunity to end practices that helped drive mass incarceration.
The ACLU urges Harris to follow the lead of her running mate, Tim Walz, who has been a pioneer for criminal legal system reform in his home state of Minnesota.
Learn more in our breakdown.
Harris on the Criminal Legal System
The Facts: A Harris administration has the opportunity to make the criminal legal system more just and humane for all by renouncing failed policies that drove mass incarceration and racial disparities.
Importantly, in 2022, President Joe Biden issued an executive order on policing that changed the use of force standard for federal law enforcement, restricted the distribution of military equipment to local law enforcement, restricted the use of deadly chokeholds and carotid restraints, and created a national police misconduct registry. In the absence of congressional action, a potential Harris administration should continue the important work of implementing Biden’s policing executive order.
A Harris administration should also expand efforts to end federal mandatory sentencing minimums, which require federal judges to impose a required sentence — sometimes as much as five years, 10 years, or 20 years, or even a mandatory life in prison sentence — regardless of the case's specific facts or the circumstances of the person sentenced. A Harris administration should appoint an attorney general committed to ending this harsh practice and implementing other critical reforms that would change the system for the better.
The Harris administration can also push for passage legislative proposals such as the Justice Safety Valve Act, which Harris co-sponsored in the past. The legislation would give federal judges the discretion to sentence below the mandatory minimum sentence. The Harris administration could also push for passage of the EQUAL Act, which the ACLU strongly supports. This bipartisan bill would end the sentencing disparities between crack and powder cocaine that has resulted in racially disproportionate arrests, prosecutions, and federal imprisonment of Black and Brown people. Lastly, in 2019, Harris introduced the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act of 2019. The legislation would have decriminalized marijuana at the federal level and made the de-scheduling of marijuana retroactive. The ACLU supports the aims of the MORE Act and allows states to undo the harms of the war on drugs.
Why It Matters: Right now, the U.S. criminal legal systems hold more than 1.9 million people in prisons, detention centers, jails and other carceral systems. Racial discrimination within these systems mean that police encounters disproportionately impact Black and Brown people, and can escalate into violent encounters or death. Currently, the burdens of petty drug-related charges, steep criminal fines or fees and unfair sentencing is also predominantly borne by Black and Brown communities, fueling a vicious cycle of poverty and criminalization.
At the ACLU, we believe everyone deserves dignity, fairness, and an opportunity to thrive. That includes people suspected, accused, or convicted of a crime. We seek to limit the harm and reach of the criminal legal system and transform our approach to safety to a system focused on prevention, not punishment. But we can’t do it alone. The executive branch has a vital role to play in realizing this vision.
How We Got Here: Harris brings extensive experience working in the criminal legal system to the White House. As a senator, Harris co-wrote and was one of the lead sponsors of the Justice in Policing Act of 2020, the most significant police reform bill to gain traction in the U.S. Senate after the murder of George Floyd in 2020. In response to the ACLU’s federal advocacy and other efforts, the most recent introduction of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in the Senate included grants for mental health crisis response programs and unarmed civilian government departments to enforce traffic violations. Harris has continued to be a proponent of police reform and accountability in her current role, recently applauding the development of a national non-public police misconduct registry for hiring federal law enforcement, and calling for the passage of the Justice in Policing Act.
Additionally, in the wake of the Trump administration’s execution spree, which killed 13 people, the Biden-Harris administration ordered, through Attorney General Merrick Garland, a halt to any future federal executions and a review of the federal execution process. Over the course of her career, Harris has fluctuated on the death penalty. If elected, the ACLU will call on Harris to suspend federal executions, approve broad grants of clemency to those on federal death row, and work for the abolition of the federal death penalty.
Our Roadmap: The ACLU will push the Harris administration to expand progressive reform efforts and challenge draconian approaches to criminal legal policy.
The ACLU will demand that Congress enact key legislation to ensure a fair and just criminal legal system, some of which were championed by Harris when she was in the U.S. Senate. This includes an improved George Floyd Justice in Policing Act to ensure accountability for police misconduct; marijuana reform to begin to address the harmful impact of the war on drugs; the Driving for Opportunity Act to reduce police interaction and the commensurate risk of harm; the Mental Health Justice Act to provide non-law- enforcement responses to mental health crises; the EQUAL Act to remove sentencing disparities between crack and powder cocaine; and the End Solitary Confinement Act to limit solitary confinement in federal facilities.
Additionally, the ACLU will continue our advocacy for legislation to repeal the federal death penalty, end mandatory minimum sentences, abolish the doctrine of qualified immunity, and stop the 1033 transfer of military weapons program. We will push a potential Harris administration to end extreme sentencing practices that fuel mass incarceration and abolish the death penalty once and for all. We will urge the administration to continue and fully implement the Biden administration’s charging policies that equalize sentencing outcomes for crack and cocaine offenses and that minimize the application of mandatory minimums.
The ACLU is hopeful that Harris will create an administration that is responsive to calls for a continued suspension of federal executions, broad grants of clemency to those on federal death row, and abolition of the federal death penalty. The ACLU will also continue our critical litigation that puts the death penalty “on trial” in the states, invalidating the death penalty based on its racist administration, including in the selection of juries.
What Our Experts Say: “I served as a public defender during the same period in our country's history that Vice President Harris worked as a prosecutor, and I know she witnessed, first hand, systemic injustices in our criminal legal system that need to be addressed immediately. We hope that if elected, Harris will use this insight to bring about transformative changes, including protecting people from police abuse, ending extreme and unjust sentencing, addressing the inhumane conditions in jails and prisons, and abolishing the federal death penalty — moving the country toward ending this inhumane practice once and for all.” — Yasmin Cader, deputy legal director and director of the ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice and Equality
“The ACLU will demand that Harris recommit to the legislative agenda that she championed as a senator. But Harris cannot wait on Congress to act: She must use her executive authority to end extreme sentencing, halt federal executions, and vastly expand the number of people granted clemency. The ACLU will continue to fight for a criminal legal system that is humane and just.” — Cynthia W. Roseberry, ACLU director of policy and government affairs
What You Can Do Today: Unchecked, unaccountable policing harms us all. Yet police continue to experience broad immunity, job security even with a pattern of misconduct, and a steady supply of war equipment directly from the Pentagon. The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act addresses these issues by helping to end racial profiling, to create real accountability for police, and to rein in police violence. Urge your representatives to pass this bill now.
Published August 30, 2024 at 05:00PM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/IJiFkDj
People’s Republic of China: Selected Issues
Published August 30, 2024 at 07:00AM
Read more at imf.org
Thursday, 29 August 2024
ACLU: Project 2025 Offers Dystopian View of America
Deeply embedded in our Bill of Rights and our most basic American values is the idea that we the people — not the government — are in charge of our own lives. But there are plenty of people who disagree with that premise and want to control our lives. And those people have a plan.
All of us remember Donald Trump’s presidency: separating families, banning visitors from Muslim countries, stacking the Supreme Court with justices who would overturn Roe v. Wade, and attacking LGBTQ people. Yet as the ACLU’s detailed analysis of Trump and his supporters' policy proposals and rhetoric has shown, if reelected, his administration will likely be far more aggressive and effective in executing its unlawful plans than ever before.
Under a second Trump administration, our federal government could be used to openly discriminate against marginalized communities, to spy on private citizens, and be given authority over what we can and can’t do with our bodies. If such a dystopian view of American life and politics feels like the plot of a Netflix special, consider that this vision of America is what former Trump administration staffers and The Heritage Foundation, a conservative-leaning think tank, have outlined in Project 2025.
Project 2025 is a federal policy agenda and a blueprint for a radical restructuring of the executive branch that would undercut decades of progress and Constitutional values. Though Trump has claimed he is not connected to Project 2025, a CNN report found that 140 people who worked on Project 2025 previously worked in Trump’s administration. The Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts also worked on Trump’s 2016 transition team and has described his organization’s role in Project 2025 as “institutionalizing Trumpism.” Trump himself told a conference, after taking a flight with Roberts, “they’re going to lay the groundwork and detail plans for exactly what our movement will do.”
While the ACLU doesn’t endorse or oppose candidates for elected office, we recognize how Project 2025 would erode our freedoms and our democracy. Project 2025's largest publication, “Mandate For Leadership,” includes a long list of extreme policy recommendations that empower Congress and the executive branch to hack away at our civil liberties and civil rights.
At the ACLU we’ve been fighting unlawful attempts to curtail our rights for more than 100 years. We’re prepared to use all of the tools at our disposal — litigation, legislation, advocacy, and grassroots mobilization — to ensure our nation lives up to the promise of the Constitution. But this fight isn’t just about policies or procedures — it’s about people.
Life Under Project 2025
Take, for example, an undocumented father living in Texas whose spouse and young children are U.S. citizens. The undocumented father is injured in a workplace accident, but in Project 2025’s America, he will have to choose between forgoing treatment or risk being separated from his family.
Currently, policy dictates that immigration agents avoid arresting or detaining suspected noncitizens in “protected areas” like schools, churches, and hospitals. But Project 2025 calls to weaponize these crucial common spaces as part of a broader anti-immigrant agenda that includes co-opting state and local police to help carry out a mass deportation plan. Nobody should have to choose between the pain of an untreated injury and the agony of being torn away from their children, but Project 2025 is designed to create exactly those kinds of impossible decisions for millions of immigrants and mixed-status families.
This example is hypothetical, but the risk is not. We’ve already seen how damaging family separation can be for children and parents, we know that immigration detention has a deadly track record of abuse and medical neglect, and we have heard time and again how devastating deportation can be across generations.
When the government decides how we are permitted to live, people and communities suffer. Imagine a 27-year-old woman in eastern Washington State who has a young son and becomes pregnant. She works two jobs, but struggles to make ends meet. She knows that having another child would be detrimental to her and her son and wants to end her pregnancy. But she lives several hours from the nearest abortion provider. She doesn’t have a car and she risks losing her job if she takes time off to travel to the clinic. Today, she would be able to do what 20 percent of people seeking abortions do and use telehealth to contact a provider and have FDA-approved abortion pills sent to her.
However, Project 2025 calls for a presidential administration to push the post-Dobbs epidemic of abortion bans into blue states like Washington. The Project has called for the misuse of a 150-year-old anti-obscenity law to prosecute health care providers for mailing abortion pills. If Project 2025 succeeds, that means the pregnant woman in Washington State won’t be able to get an abortion and will be forced to carry her pregnancy against her will and endure labor, possibly putting her own health and the wellbeing of her family at risk.
Scenarios like what the pregnant woman in Washington State may face prove that if freedom means anything, it should mean that we alone control our most intimate decisions. That includes how we present ourselves to the world.
Consider an Iraq war veteran who, like many veterans, receives medical care from a Veterans Affairs (VA) hospital. The veteran does not have other medical insurance, or the resources to pay for medical care out of pocket. She is transgender and has been receiving gender-affirming hormone therapy for more than a decade. Prior to beginning hormone therapy, she experienced significant gender dysphoria, which impacted her mental health and ability to function. She depends on gender-affirming care from the VA to keep her body aligned with her identity so she can maintain her health and well-being.
For the trans veteran, Project 2025 would be devastating. Following Project 2025’s playbook, the VA would prohibit the provision of gender-affirming medical care in the VA healthcare system. As a result, she is now forced to discontinue her treatment and medically detransition. She ends up struggling with the serious health impacts of untreated gender dysphoria, forcing her to take medical leave from her job and causing her to retreat from the military community she had built her life around.
The effects of Project 2025, however, won’t just undercut a single community or person, it will ensure that an entire generation lacks the resources to make informed decisions.
Imagine a high school English teacher in an under-resourced public school that is 65 percent Black. He knows from personal experience that not seeing himself reflected in the books he read and the history he learned made it hard to stay engaged and motivated in school. He remembers the “aha moment” when he took his first African American literature class in college and realized what it’s like to see his experiences represented on the page. That’s why he built an English curriculum that includes books by Black and brown authors, discusses current events that impact racial justice, and encourages students to write freely about their own identities. He’s found that allowing students to feel seen in what they study and in the work they do not only boosts engagement, but also test scores and graduation rates.
"Preventing Project 2025’s dystopian view of America relies on all of us to stand up for what we believe in and protect each other."
Project 2025 wants to gut the teacher’s entire curriculum. Already a wave of classroom censorship and anti-diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) laws have severely restricted students’ right to learn. Project 2025 vows to take it a step further and eliminate all efforts to acknowledge or support diversity in schools. In Project 2025’s America, states are empowered to pass laws that force the English teacher to educate students on the benefits of slavery, or to remove all mentions of race when discussing civil rights icons like Rosa Parks. If Project 2025 succeeds, the teacher can no longer lead discussions about race in policing or in hate crimes without the risk of being fired for engaging in so-called anti-white racism. Unwilling to turn his back on his students, our teacher tests the limits, and quickly finds himself on administrative leave.
As each of these examples show, Project 2025’s nightmarish vision of America should alarm anyone who cares not just about the principles of constitutional freedoms and rights, but about people. The ACLU won’t stand idly by and let our fundamental freedoms — including our right to say what we want, to control our bodies, and to participate freely in society — be taken from us.
No matter who is elected president in November, the ACLU’s legal and advocacy experts have a roadmap to preserve and expand the rights of immigrant and LGBTQ communities, to advocate for abortion access, to pass nondiscrimination laws, and to fight for our rights. We’re prepared to urge Congress to use its constitutional powers to provide oversight, investigate wrongdoing, and defund restrictive executive branch policies. At the state level, we’ll work with lawmakers to enact laws that protect people from government abuse. Already, we’re in communities working to educate people on the harms of Project 2025 so we can fight for our freedoms.
But we can’t win this fight alone. Preventing Project 2025’s dystopian view of America relies on all of us to stand up for what we believe in and protect each other. Whether it’s our trans veteran who only wants to live as her true self, or our pregnant woman making the most intimate decisions about her life, or our high school teacher trying to empower the next generation, or our immigrant family that only wants to feel safe, we must all show up to support each other and our rights.
At the ACLU, we’re with you — in Congress, in the courts, in the streets — as we work together to build the more free and more just country we deserve.
We want to know how Project 2025 will affect you. Share your story with us.
Published August 29, 2024 at 10:27PM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/LWIN29w
ACLU: Project 2025 Offers Dystopian View of America
Deeply embedded in our Bill of Rights and our most basic American values is the idea that we the people — not the government — are in charge of our own lives. But there are plenty of people who disagree with that premise and want to control our lives. And those people have a plan.
All of us remember Donald Trump’s presidency: separating families, banning visitors from Muslim countries, stacking the Supreme Court with justices who would overturn Roe v. Wade, and attacking LGBTQ people. Yet as the ACLU’s detailed analysis of Trump and his supporters' policy proposals and rhetoric has shown, if reelected, his administration will likely be far more aggressive and effective in executing its unlawful plans than ever before.
Under a second Trump administration, our federal government could be used to openly discriminate against marginalized communities, to spy on private citizens, and be given authority over what we can and can’t do with our bodies. If such a dystopian view of American life and politics feels like the plot of a Netflix special, consider that this vision of America is what former Trump administration staffers and The Heritage Foundation, a conservative-leaning think tank, have outlined in Project 2025.
Project 2025 is a federal policy agenda and a blueprint for a radical restructuring of the executive branch that would undercut decades of progress and Constitutional values. Though Trump has claimed he is not connected to Project 2025, a CNN report found that 140 people who worked on Project 2025 previously worked in Trump’s administration. The Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts also worked on Trump’s 2016 transition team and has described his organization’s role in Project 2025 as “institutionalizing Trumpism.” Trump himself told a conference, after taking a flight with Roberts, “they’re going to lay the groundwork and detail plans for exactly what our movement will do.”
While the ACLU doesn’t endorse or oppose candidates for elected office, we recognize how Project 2025 would erode our freedoms and our democracy. Project 2025's largest publication, “Mandate For Leadership,” includes a long list of extreme policy recommendations that empower Congress and the executive branch to hack away at our civil liberties and civil rights.
At the ACLU we’ve been fighting unlawful attempts to curtail our rights for more than 100 years. We’re prepared to use all of the tools at our disposal — litigation, legislation, advocacy, and grassroots mobilization — to ensure our nation lives up to the promise of the Constitution. But this fight isn’t just about policies or procedures — it’s about people.
Life Under Project 2025
Take, for example, an undocumented father living in Texas whose spouse and young children are U.S. citizens. The undocumented father is injured in a workplace accident, but in Project 2025’s America, he will have to choose between forgoing treatment or risk being separated from his family.
Currently, policy dictates that immigration agents avoid arresting or detaining suspected noncitizens in “protected areas” like schools, churches, and hospitals. But Project 2025 calls to weaponize these crucial common spaces as part of a broader anti-immigrant agenda that includes co-opting state and local police to help carry out a mass deportation plan. Nobody should have to choose between the pain of an untreated injury and the agony of being torn away from their children, but Project 2025 is designed to create exactly those kinds of impossible decisions for millions of immigrants and mixed-status families.
This example is hypothetical, but the risk is not. We’ve already seen how damaging family separation can be for children and parents, we know that immigration detention has a deadly track record of abuse and medical neglect, and we have heard time and again how devastating deportation can be across generations.
When the government decides how we are permitted to live, people and communities suffer. Imagine a 27-year-old woman in eastern Washington State who has a young son and becomes pregnant. She works two jobs, but struggles to make ends meet. She knows that having another child would be detrimental to her and her son and wants to end her pregnancy. But she lives several hours from the nearest abortion provider. She doesn’t have a car and she risks losing her job if she takes time off to travel to the clinic. Today, she would be able to do what 20 percent of people seeking abortions do and use telehealth to contact a provider and have FDA-approved abortion pills sent to her.
However, Project 2025 calls for a presidential administration to push the post-Dobbs epidemic of abortion bans into blue states like Washington. The Project has called for the misuse of a 150-year-old anti-obscenity law to prosecute health care providers for mailing abortion pills. If Project 2025 succeeds, that means the pregnant woman in Washington State won’t be able to get an abortion and will be forced to carry her pregnancy against her will and endure labor, possibly putting her own health and the wellbeing of her family at risk.
Scenarios like what the pregnant woman in Washington State may face prove that if freedom means anything, it should mean that we alone control our most intimate decisions. That includes how we present ourselves to the world.
Consider an Iraq war veteran who, like many veterans, receives medical care from a Veterans Affairs (VA) hospital. The veteran does not have other medical insurance, or the resources to pay for medical care out of pocket. She is transgender and has been receiving gender-affirming hormone therapy for more than a decade. Prior to beginning hormone therapy, she experienced significant gender dysphoria, which impacted her mental health and ability to function. She depends on gender-affirming care from the VA to keep her body aligned with her identity so she can maintain her health and well-being.
For the trans veteran, Project 2025 would be devastating. Following Project 2025’s playbook, the VA would prohibit the provision of gender-affirming medical care in the VA healthcare system. As a result, she is now forced to discontinue her treatment and medically detransition. She ends up struggling with the serious health impacts of untreated gender dysphoria, forcing her to take medical leave from her job and causing her to retreat from the military community she had built her life around.
The effects of Project 2025, however, won’t just undercut a single community or person, it will ensure that an entire generation lacks the resources to make informed decisions.
Imagine a high school English teacher in an under-resourced public school that is 65 percent Black. He knows from personal experience that not seeing himself reflected in the books he read and the history he learned made it hard to stay engaged and motivated in school. He remembers the “aha moment” when he took his first African American literature class in college and realized what it’s like to see his experiences represented on the page. That’s why he built an English curriculum that includes books by Black and brown authors, discusses current events that impact racial justice, and encourages students to write freely about their own identities. He’s found that allowing students to feel seen in what they study and in the work they do not only boosts engagement, but also test scores and graduation rates.
"Preventing Project 2025’s dystopian view of America relies on all of us to stand up for what we believe in and protect each other."
Project 2025 wants to gut the teacher’s entire curriculum. Already a wave of classroom censorship and anti-diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) laws have severely restricted students’ right to learn. Project 2025 vows to take it a step further and eliminate all efforts to acknowledge or support diversity in schools. In Project 2025’s America, states are empowered to pass laws that force the English teacher to educate students on the benefits of slavery, or to remove all mentions of race when discussing civil rights icons like Rosa Parks. If Project 2025 succeeds, the teacher can no longer lead discussions about race in policing or in hate crimes without the risk of being fired for engaging in so-called anti-white racism. Unwilling to turn his back on his students, our teacher tests the limits, and quickly finds himself on administrative leave.
As each of these examples show, Project 2025’s nightmarish vision of America should alarm anyone who cares not just about the principles of constitutional freedoms and rights, but about people. The ACLU won’t stand idly by and let our fundamental freedoms — including our right to say what we want, to control our bodies, and to participate freely in society — be taken from us.
No matter who is elected president in November, the ACLU’s legal and advocacy experts have a roadmap to preserve and expand the rights of immigrant and LGBTQ communities, to advocate for abortion access, to pass nondiscrimination laws, and to fight for our rights. We’re prepared to urge Congress to use its constitutional powers to provide oversight, investigate wrongdoing, and defund restrictive executive branch policies. At the state level, we’ll work with lawmakers to enact laws that protect people from government abuse. Already, we’re in communities working to educate people on the harms of Project 2025 so we can fight for our freedoms.
But we can’t win this fight alone. Preventing Project 2025’s dystopian view of America relies on all of us to stand up for what we believe in and protect each other. Whether it’s our trans veteran who only wants to live as her true self, or our pregnant woman making the most intimate decisions about her life, or our high school teacher trying to empower the next generation, or our immigrant family that only wants to feel safe, we must all show up to support each other and our rights.
At the ACLU, we’re with you — in Congress, in the courts, in the streets — as we work together to build the more free and more just country we deserve.
We want to know how Project 2025 will affect you. Share your story with us.
Published August 29, 2024 at 05:57PM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/LKs7lkX
Wednesday, 28 August 2024
ACLU: Why Kamala Harris Must Break the Cycle of Unlawful and Abusive Government Surveillance
Since this nation’s founding, the executive branch has been granted — or has claimed — immense power to enforce the law, including the power to surveil, investigate, and impose criminal or other sanctions that deprive individuals of their freedoms. Today, national security agencies — including those with law enforcement, intelligence, homeland security, and defense functions — combine their expansive authorities with unprecedented digital tools that peer into our lives and collect immense amounts of information about us.
Campaign-trail promises to review and rein in the use of executive authority and surveillance tools are too often broken when a presidential candidate — Republican or Democrat — wins office, much to the detriment of our system of checks and balances, privacy, civil rights, and civil liberties. We’re calling on Vice President Kamala Harris to break this cycle if she’s elected in November. Her administration must protect us from Big Brother digital surveillance; end unjustified and discriminatory domestic surveillance and investigation of activists, communities of color, and disfavored groups; and implement strong safeguards for artificial intelligence and data privacy.
Learn more in our breakdown.
Harris on Surveillance
The Facts: The government has vast, unprecedented powers to peer into people’s private lives. Right now, it exploits at least three sources to conduct sweeping surveillance of Americans: Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which authorizes the collection of communications between U.S. persons and people outside the United States; Executive Order 12333, which allows the government to conduct bulk surveillance outside the U.S. and results in the collection of Americans’ private data; and the government’s use of commercial data brokers to purchase massive quantities of our private data.
Through these far-reaching surveillance methods, the federal government obtains access to incredibly sensitive information about Americans that can paint a detailed portrait of our private thoughts, relationships, and actions. The government regularly searches through that data for intelligence or domestic law enforcement purposes without a warrant and without notice or other significant safeguards necessary to protect our rights.
Domestic national security and counterterrorism policies and programs also pose a singular threat to Americans’ privacy, civil rights, and civil liberties. Federal agencies regularly exercise their authority and wield technology to disproportionately and wrongly surveil, investigate, watchlist, question, and detain at the border, and deny immigration benefits to vulnerable communities. These efforts often discriminate against racial and religious minorities and those who dissent against government policies, denying them the ability to participate as equals in our democracy.
Lastly, the federal government’s use of artificial intelligence (AI) urgently needs greater oversight and stronger safeguards to protect our privacy. Federal agencies are using algorithmic systems and AI to, among many other things, determine public benefits levels, assess families for child welfare proceedings, score incarcerated individuals for early release, and identify individuals for criminal investigations. Using AI in this manner can restrict our rights, and increase the risk of discrimination.
Why It Matters: When executive branch officials claim expansive powers to surveil and investigate individuals without meaningful judicial review and congressional oversight, these powers are all too easily abused.
Through dragnet surveillance, for example, the government regularly searches through troves of American’s data for intelligence or domestic law enforcement purposes without a warrant and without notice of its spying. Domestically, the FBI has spied on Muslim communities and, more generally, treated non-violent civil disobedience and vandalism as justification for conducting national security investigations of civil rights, social justice, and environmental activists. Recently, in 2020, the Justice Department deployed joint federal-state law enforcement partnerships to conduct “counterterrorism” investigations against racial justice protestors. The Department of Homeland Security, too, has focused its surveillance authorities on political and other constitutionally-protected speech, as well as activities far outside its homeland security mandate, including those of: journalists, racial justice demonstrators in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, and people simply reacting online to the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.
In addition, U.S. national security agencies and the military are seeking to integrate AI into some of the government’s most profound decisions, including: who it surveils; who it places on government watchlists; who it subjects to intrusive searches at the border; who it labels a “risk” or “threat” to national security; and even who or what it targets with lethal force. These programs have not been meaningfully tested for efficacy, and have little to no safeguards or transparency.
How We Got Here: For more than 40 years, the government has used mass warrantless surveillance authorities — like Section 702 of FISA and Executive Order 12333 — in secret. People whose privacy rights are violated have had very little legal recourse due to the government’s refusal to disclose even basic information about this surveillance. On the rare occasions when people have brought legal challenges, the government’s use of the “state secrets privilege” has often thwarted court review of these intrusive spying programs.
Federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies’ use of national security investigative authorities flows in part from the USA Patriot Act of 2001, which enacted — for the first time — a definition of “domestic terrorism.” That definition is vague, covering acts deemed “dangerous to life” that “appear to be intended to” intimidate or coerce the public or the government. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies have used this definition to claim expansive investigative authorities that restrict our civil liberties. At the same time, federal nondiscrimination guidance permits profiling on the basis of race, religion, national origin, and other protected characteristics. As a result, recent history is rife with federal agencies’ use of its expansive authority to unfairly target people of color and other marginalized communities for surveillance, investigation, prosecution, and programs like watchlisting,
Additionally, national security agencies are increasingly developing and deploying AI systems, presenting immense risks to the rights and safety of people in the U.S. and abroad. While Congress and the Biden-Harris administration have taken steps to increase transparency, trust, and fairness in the AI tools used by many agencies, national security have been largely exempted from these important measures.
Our Roadmap: The ACLU will push a Harris administration to rein in surveillance use that discriminates against or invades people’s privacy.
In court, we will maintain our track record of exposing and challenging federal agencies’ infringements of individuals’ privacy, civil liberties, and civil rights. We will support and defend protestors, racial and religious minorities, immigrants, and others who are subjected to abusive surveillance, investigation, prosecution, and coercive measures like wrongful watchlisting. We will also sue federal agencies that abuse their coercive powers to illegally invade Americans’ privacy, or discriminate based on race, ethnicity, and other protected characteristics.
Although members of both parties have been quick to empower the executive branch in the name of national and homeland security, the ACLU has built a durable bipartisan coalition of advocacy organizations and former and current policymakers to push for limits on government surveillance. We will work with our allies to implement specific measures to rein in overbroad and unwarranted surveillance, and to change the politics around surveillance and individual liberty so that politicians are more likely to defend them. Across the country, the ACLU is already responding to attacks on dissent against the government, and rallying allies around the need for robust separation of powers, strong due process protections, and limits on executive power.
At the state level, we urge leaders to restrict the information they provide to federal agencies and departments. For example, the ACLU has successfully advanced state and local laws to increase community control over policing and championed legislation to restrict “reverse” warrants and end purchases of personal information from data brokers. These efforts would reduce the pool of data available to law enforcement, including federal law enforcement. In addition, we will urge state and local governments to end, or sharply limit, their participation in fusion centers and other state-federal intelligence hubs that have been rife with abuse.
What Our Experts Say: “Despite perennial campaign trail promises to rein in surveillance powers that violate our privacy and civil liberties, once in office, presidents from both parties have all-too-often doubled down on the same powers that consistently lead to abuse. Regardless of who is president, the ACLU will continue to shed light on the government’s warrantless spying on Americans and challenge wrongful and discriminatory surveillance in court to vindicate the rights of people who are harmed.” — Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU National Security Project
“As a senator, Kamala Harris had a strong record of opposing legislative efforts to expand or extend surveillance powers. As vice president, she recognized the ‘moral, ethical, and societal duty’ to protect Americans from potential harms of AI. If elected president, we hope she brings that same fire to the White House and commits to restoring checks and balances to mass surveillance.” — Kia Hamadanchy, ACLU senior policy counsel
What You Can Do Today: The ACLU has long advocated for robust legislation that safeguards against all kinds of government overreach, including the unlawful warrantless surveillance of our private communications. Show your support by calling your senator to support the Fourth Amendment is Not for Sale Act now.
Published August 29, 2024 at 12:35AM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/2fYkBrW
ACLU: Why Kamala Harris Must Break the Cycle of Unlawful and Abusive Government Surveillance
Since this nation’s founding, the executive branch has been granted — or has claimed — immense power to enforce the law, including the power to surveil, investigate, and impose criminal or other sanctions that deprive individuals of their freedoms. Today, national security agencies — including those with law enforcement, intelligence, homeland security, and defense functions — combine their expansive authorities with unprecedented digital tools that peer into our lives and collect immense amounts of information about us.
Campaign-trail promises to review and rein in the use of executive authority and surveillance tools are too often broken when a presidential candidate — Republican or Democrat — wins office, much to the detriment of our system of checks and balances, privacy, civil rights, and civil liberties. We’re calling on Vice President Kamala Harris to break this cycle if she’s elected in November. Her administration must protect us from Big Brother digital surveillance; end unjustified and discriminatory domestic surveillance and investigation of activists, communities of color, and disfavored groups; and implement strong safeguards for artificial intelligence and data privacy.
Learn more in our breakdown.
Harris on Surveillance
The Facts: The government has vast, unprecedented powers to peer into people’s private lives. Right now, it exploits at least three sources to conduct sweeping surveillance of Americans: Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which authorizes the collection of communications between U.S. persons and people outside the United States; Executive Order 12333, which allows the government to conduct bulk surveillance outside the U.S. and results in the collection of Americans’ private data; and the government’s use of commercial data brokers to purchase massive quantities of our private data.
Through these far-reaching surveillance methods, the federal government obtains access to incredibly sensitive information about Americans that can paint a detailed portrait of our private thoughts, relationships, and actions. The government regularly searches through that data for intelligence or domestic law enforcement purposes without a warrant and without notice or other significant safeguards necessary to protect our rights.
Domestic national security and counterterrorism policies and programs also pose a singular threat to Americans’ privacy, civil rights, and civil liberties. Federal agencies regularly exercise their authority and wield technology to disproportionately and wrongly surveil, investigate, watchlist, question, and detain at the border, and deny immigration benefits to vulnerable communities. These efforts often discriminate against racial and religious minorities and those who dissent against government policies, denying them the ability to participate as equals in our democracy.
Lastly, the federal government’s use of artificial intelligence (AI) urgently needs greater oversight and stronger safeguards to protect our privacy. Federal agencies are using algorithmic systems and AI to, among many other things, determine public benefits levels, assess families for child welfare proceedings, score incarcerated individuals for early release, and identify individuals for criminal investigations. Using AI in this manner can restrict our rights, and increase the risk of discrimination.
Why It Matters: When executive branch officials claim expansive powers to surveil and investigate individuals without meaningful judicial review and congressional oversight, these powers are all too easily abused.
Through dragnet surveillance, for example, the government regularly searches through troves of American’s data for intelligence or domestic law enforcement purposes without a warrant and without notice of its spying. Domestically, the FBI has spied on Muslim communities and, more generally, treated non-violent civil disobedience and vandalism as justification for conducting national security investigations of civil rights, social justice, and environmental activists. Recently, in 2020, the Justice Department deployed joint federal-state law enforcement partnerships to conduct “counterterrorism” investigations against racial justice protestors. The Department of Homeland Security, too, has focused its surveillance authorities on political and other constitutionally-protected speech, as well as activities far outside its homeland security mandate, including those of: journalists, racial justice demonstrators in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, and people simply reacting online to the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.
In addition, U.S. national security agencies and the military are seeking to integrate AI into some of the government’s most profound decisions, including: who it surveils; who it places on government watchlists; who it subjects to intrusive searches at the border; who it labels a “risk” or “threat” to national security; and even who or what it targets with lethal force. These programs have not been meaningfully tested for efficacy, and have little to no safeguards or transparency.
How We Got Here: For more than 40 years, the government has used mass warrantless surveillance authorities — like Section 702 of FISA and Executive Order 12333 — in secret. People whose privacy rights are violated have had very little legal recourse due to the government’s refusal to disclose even basic information about this surveillance. On the rare occasions when people have brought legal challenges, the government’s use of the “state secrets privilege” has often thwarted court review of these intrusive spying programs.
Federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies’ use of national security investigative authorities flows in part from the USA Patriot Act of 2001, which enacted — for the first time — a definition of “domestic terrorism.” That definition is vague, covering acts deemed “dangerous to life” that “appear to be intended to” intimidate or coerce the public or the government. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies have used this definition to claim expansive investigative authorities that restrict our civil liberties. At the same time, federal nondiscrimination guidance permits profiling on the basis of race, religion, national origin, and other protected characteristics. As a result, recent history is rife with federal agencies’ use of its expansive authority to unfairly target people of color and other marginalized communities for surveillance, investigation, prosecution, and programs like watchlisting,
Additionally, national security agencies are increasingly developing and deploying AI systems, presenting immense risks to the rights and safety of people in the U.S. and abroad. While Congress and the Biden-Harris administration have taken steps to increase transparency, trust, and fairness in the AI tools used by many agencies, national security have been largely exempted from these important measures.
Our Roadmap: The ACLU will push a Harris administration to rein in surveillance use that discriminates against or invades people’s privacy.
In court, we will maintain our track record of exposing and challenging federal agencies’ infringements of individuals’ privacy, civil liberties, and civil rights. We will support and defend protestors, racial and religious minorities, immigrants, and others who are subjected to abusive surveillance, investigation, prosecution, and coercive measures like wrongful watchlisting. We will also sue federal agencies that abuse their coercive powers to illegally invade Americans’ privacy, or discriminate based on race, ethnicity, and other protected characteristics.
Although members of both parties have been quick to empower the executive branch in the name of national and homeland security, the ACLU has built a durable bipartisan coalition of advocacy organizations and former and current policymakers to push for limits on government surveillance. We will work with our allies to implement specific measures to rein in overbroad and unwarranted surveillance, and to change the politics around surveillance and individual liberty so that politicians are more likely to defend them. Across the country, the ACLU is already responding to attacks on dissent against the government, and rallying allies around the need for robust separation of powers, strong due process protections, and limits on executive power.
At the state level, we urge leaders to restrict the information they provide to federal agencies and departments. For example, the ACLU has successfully advanced state and local laws to increase community control over policing and championed legislation to restrict “reverse” warrants and end purchases of personal information from data brokers. These efforts would reduce the pool of data available to law enforcement, including federal law enforcement. In addition, we will urge state and local governments to end, or sharply limit, their participation in fusion centers and other state-federal intelligence hubs that have been rife with abuse.
What Our Experts Say: “Despite perennial campaign trail promises to rein in surveillance powers that violate our privacy and civil liberties, once in office, presidents from both parties have all-too-often doubled down on the same powers that consistently lead to abuse. Regardless of who is president, the ACLU will continue to shed light on the government’s warrantless spying on Americans and challenge wrongful and discriminatory surveillance in court to vindicate the rights of people who are harmed.” — Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU National Security Project
“As a senator, Kamala Harris had a strong record of opposing legislative efforts to expand or extend surveillance powers. As vice president, she recognized the ‘moral, ethical, and societal duty’ to protect Americans from potential harms of AI. If elected president, we hope she brings that same fire to the White House and commits to restoring checks and balances to mass surveillance.” — Kia Hamadanchy, ACLU senior policy counsel
What You Can Do Today: The ACLU has long advocated for robust legislation that safeguards against all kinds of government overreach, including the unlawful warrantless surveillance of our private communications. Show your support by calling your senator to support the Fourth Amendment is Not for Sale Act now.
Published August 28, 2024 at 08:05PM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/uwMpdnG
Chile: Request for an Arrangement under the Flexible Credit Line and Cancellation of the Current Arrangement-Press Release; Staff Report; Staff Supplement; and Statement by the Executive Director for Chile
Published August 28, 2024 at 07:00AM
Read more at imf.org
Monday, 26 August 2024
Arab Republic of Egypt: Third Review Under the Extended Arrangement Under the Extended Fund Facility, Monetary Policy Consultation Clause, Requests for Waivers of Nonobservance of a Performance Criterion and Applicability of Performance Criteria, and Request for Modification of Performance Criteria-Press Release; and Staff Report
Published August 26, 2024 at 07:00AM
Read more at imf.org
Tuesday, 20 August 2024
ACLU: How a Harris Administration Could Chart a New Course for Immigration Reform
Despite immigrants’ contributions to our communities and economy, our current immigration system still fails to provide a way for millions of immigrants to apply for legal status and citizenship. Instead, the system wastes billions of dollars on dangerous and unnecessary detention, frequently violates basic principles of fairness and due process, and fails to deliver on our legal and moral obligation to protect people fleeing persecution.
If elected, Vice President Kamala Harris has an opportunity to chart a new course. At the ACLU, we urge the Harris-Walz administration to champion policies that recognize the value of immigrants’ contributions to the United States, that humanely manage the border, that restore asylum and respect the rights of arriving immigrants, and that strengthen ways to lawfully come to this country.
Learn more in our breakdown.
Harris on Immigrants' Rights
The Facts: A Harris-Walz presidency must prioritize immigration reform that includes a path to citizenship and protection from deportation.
Specifically, we encourage a Harris administration to use its executive authority to protect longtime members of the immigrant community, including by issuing additional designations for Temporary Protected Status (TPS), and protecting parents and other caregivers from deportation. We will also urge Harris to work with Congress to prioritize reform efforts that will provide a pathway to citizenship and strengthen American families and communities.
To support meaningful asylum and border management reforms, Harris must go beyond “toughness” as the measure of policy. She will instead need to embrace and communicate the fact that a functional asylum system furthers our values and benefits American communities. Her administration will need to invest in solutions that restore and modernize the asylum system, ensure fairness for people seeking protection, and support the communities that receive new immigrants.
Why It Matters: Today, the vast majority of undocumented immigrants have lived in the United States for more than a decade, but under our current system they often cannot obtain legal status as there is no “line” for them to get into or “right way” to get citizenship. Right now, an estimated one in 10 American children live with someone who lacks legal status, including parents and siblings. These families live in fear of being broken apart through deportation. Many are at risk of deportation to countries they do not consider home — having left those countries as children — or where they would be unsafe due to conflict and crisis.
At the same time, global migration is at an all time high, yet people fleeing violence and persecution are left with few options to seek safety in the U.S. as the government has sought to restrict the legal right to seek asylum. These anti-asylum policies leave many vulnerable people in danger and do nothing to improve border management, our immigration court system, or coordination to receive our new neighbors.
How We Got Here: Throughout his presidency, Donald Trump aggressively attacked and undermined our nation’s asylum laws. Soon after Joe Biden’s inauguration, his administration restarted the refugee processing system, giving hope to many that the Trump era of scapegoating immigrants and dismantling our humanitarian protection system was over. However, the Biden administration never restored the asylum system. To the contrary, Biden initially elected to continue his predecessor’s unlawful “expulsion” policy. When it ended, he rolled out a new, extreme border restriction that largely mimicked two Trump-era policies, which courts had held as illegal.
In June 2024, the Biden administration doubled down on this approach with its illegal “Securing the Border” rule, further limiting access to protection for everyone at the border who is not able to obtain a rare port appointment to seek asylum. Adding to this, states like Texas have attempted to take enforcement of the federal immigration laws into their own hands, both at and beyond the border. Evidence has repeatedly demonstrated that state and local immigration enforcement leads to racial profiling and arbitrary detention — including of U.S. citizens — and terrorizes entire communities.
Our Roadmap: To start, the ACLU will urge a Harris-Walz administration to take aggressive executive action to dismantle the system of mass immigrant detention. Specifically, we are asking Harris to issue an executive order on immigrant detention that includes a moratorium on any new detention facilities, requires a review and closure of detention facilities with records of abuse, and phases private and contract detention centers. We will also encourage a Harris administration to exercise executive power to expand pathways for people inside and outside the United States — including our nation’s military veterans and people who have been wrongfully deported — to safely seek lawful status. The administration must also call for Congress to reduce funding for immigrant detention, and initiate a review of every person currently in immigration custody.
We will also work to persuade a Harris administration to restore access to asylum and end the Biden administration’s anti-asylum policies in favor of a balanced strategy that recognizes and protects the right to asylum while improving border management. Should a Harris-Walz administration adopt the Biden administration’s illegal anti-asylum policies, we will continue our legal fights against them.
We will also challenge state laws that target immigrant communities for harassment, racial profiling, arrest, banishment, or removal. We will urge the Harris-Walz administration to end the federal government’s collaboration with state and local anti-immigrant programs that violate civil rights, and to protect all communities from abusive, politically-motivated policies. Lastly, as we have done time and again, we will mobilize our members to elevate the will of the American people to take a balanced approach to immigration and for the U.S. to live up to its values.
What Our Experts Say: “A Harris administration could provide a critical opportunity to ensure a balanced and humane approach to U.S. immigration policy that recognizes the contributions of immigrants to our communities. Poll after poll, including research from the ACLU, shows that Americans support fair, orderly, and efficient policies that improve border management while offering a pathway to citizenship for our longtime neighbors – and a Harris administration should deliver on the will of the American people.” — Maribel Hernández Rivera, director of policy and government affairs for border and immigration at the ACLU
“If elected, a Kamala Harris administration has an opportunity to chart a new course on U.S. immigration policy and ensure a pathway to citizenship for longtime residents, while doing the critical work to restore our nation’s asylum system. As we have under every administration in the last two decades, we will continue to challenge the government when it violates the constitution and laws, as with prolonged immigration detention, detention of people in abusive conditions of confinement, anti-asylum bans, and immigration proceedings that violate due process and basic standards of fairness.” – Omar Jadwat, director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project
What You Can Do Today: Even as the number of deaths in ICE custody has risen dramatically, the Biden administration is actively attempting to expand the detention system with new contracts to private prison companies despite persistent records of abuse and medical negligence. Tell the Biden administration to release medically vulnerable people from ICE detention and shut down the mass detention machine once and for all.
Published August 20, 2024 at 09:04PM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/LDVIH1X
ACLU: How a Harris Administration Could Chart a New Course for Immigration Reform
Despite immigrants’ contributions to our communities and economy, our current immigration system still fails to provide a way for millions of immigrants to apply for legal status and citizenship. Instead, the system wastes billions of dollars on dangerous and unnecessary detention, frequently violates basic principles of fairness and due process, and fails to deliver on our legal and moral obligation to protect people fleeing persecution.
If elected, Vice President Kamala Harris has an opportunity to chart a new course. At the ACLU, we urge the Harris-Walz administration to champion policies that recognize the value of immigrants’ contributions to the United States, that humanely manage the border, that restore asylum and respect the rights of arriving immigrants, and that strengthen ways to lawfully come to this country.
Learn more in our breakdown.
Harris on Immigrants' Rights
The Facts: A Harris-Walz presidency must prioritize immigration reform that includes a path to citizenship and protection from deportation.
Specifically, we encourage a Harris administration to use its executive authority to protect longtime members of the immigrant community, including by issuing additional designations for Temporary Protected Status (TPS), and protecting parents and other caregivers from deportation. We will also urge Harris to work with Congress to prioritize reform efforts that will provide a pathway to citizenship and strengthen American families and communities.
To support meaningful asylum and border management reforms, Harris must go beyond “toughness” as the measure of policy. She will instead need to embrace and communicate the fact that a functional asylum system furthers our values and benefits American communities. Her administration will need to invest in solutions that restore and modernize the asylum system, ensure fairness for people seeking protection, and support the communities that receive new immigrants.
Why It Matters: Today, the vast majority of undocumented immigrants have lived in the United States for more than a decade, but under our current system they often cannot obtain legal status as there is no “line” for them to get into or “right way” to get citizenship. Right now, an estimated one in 10 American children live with someone who lacks legal status, including parents and siblings. These families live in fear of being broken apart through deportation. Many are at risk of deportation to countries they do not consider home — having left those countries as children — or where they would be unsafe due to conflict and crisis.
At the same time, global migration is at an all time high, yet people fleeing violence and persecution are left with few options to seek safety in the U.S. as the government has sought to restrict the legal right to seek asylum. These anti-asylum policies leave many vulnerable people in danger and do nothing to improve border management, our immigration court system, or coordination to receive our new neighbors.
How We Got Here: Throughout his presidency, Donald Trump aggressively attacked and undermined our nation’s asylum laws. Soon after Joe Biden’s inauguration, his administration restarted the refugee processing system, giving hope to many that the Trump era of scapegoating immigrants and dismantling our humanitarian protection system was over. However, the Biden administration never restored the asylum system. To the contrary, Biden initially elected to continue his predecessor’s unlawful “expulsion” policy. When it ended, he rolled out a new, extreme border restriction that largely mimicked two Trump-era policies, which courts had held as illegal.
In June 2024, the Biden administration doubled down on this approach with its illegal “Securing the Border” rule, further limiting access to protection for everyone at the border who is not able to obtain a rare port appointment to seek asylum. Adding to this, states like Texas have attempted to take enforcement of the federal immigration laws into their own hands, both at and beyond the border. Evidence has repeatedly demonstrated that state and local immigration enforcement leads to racial profiling and arbitrary detention — including of U.S. citizens — and terrorizes entire communities.
Our Roadmap: To start, the ACLU will urge a Harris-Walz administration to take aggressive executive action to dismantle the system of mass immigrant detention. Specifically, we are asking Harris to issue an executive order on immigrant detention that includes a moratorium on any new detention facilities, requires a review and closure of detention facilities with records of abuse, and phases private and contract detention centers. We will also encourage a Harris administration to exercise executive power to expand pathways for people inside and outside the United States — including our nation’s military veterans and people who have been wrongfully deported — to safely seek lawful status. The administration must also call for Congress to reduce funding for immigrant detention, and initiate a review of every person currently in immigration custody.
We will also work to persuade a Harris administration to restore access to asylum and end the Biden administration’s anti-asylum policies in favor of a balanced strategy that recognizes and protects the right to asylum while improving border management. Should a Harris-Walz administration adopt the Biden administration’s illegal anti-asylum policies, we will continue our legal fights against them.
We will also challenge state laws that target immigrant communities for harassment, racial profiling, arrest, banishment, or removal. We will urge the Harris-Walz administration to end the federal government’s collaboration with state and local anti-immigrant programs that violate civil rights, and to protect all communities from abusive, politically-motivated policies. Lastly, as we have done time and again, we will mobilize our members to elevate the will of the American people to take a balanced approach to immigration and for the U.S. to live up to its values.
What Our Experts Say: “A Harris administration could provide a critical opportunity to ensure a balanced and humane approach to U.S. immigration policy that recognizes the contributions of immigrants to our communities. Poll after poll, including research from the ACLU, shows that Americans support fair, orderly, and efficient policies that improve border management while offering a pathway to citizenship for our longtime neighbors – and a Harris administration should deliver on the will of the American people.” — Maribel Hernández Rivera, director of policy and government affairs for border and immigration at the ACLU
“If elected, a Kamala Harris administration has an opportunity to chart a new course on U.S. immigration policy and ensure a pathway to citizenship for longtime residents, while doing the critical work to restore our nation’s asylum system. As we have under every administration in the last two decades, we will continue to challenge the government when it violates the constitution and laws, as with prolonged immigration detention, detention of people in abusive conditions of confinement, anti-asylum bans, and immigration proceedings that violate due process and basic standards of fairness.” – Omar Jadwat, director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project
What You Can Do Today: Even as the number of deaths in ICE custody has risen dramatically, the Biden administration is actively attempting to expand the detention system with new contracts to private prison companies despite persistent records of abuse and medical negligence. Tell the Biden administration to release medically vulnerable people from ICE detention and shut down the mass detention machine once and for all.
Published August 20, 2024 at 04:34PM
via ACLU https://ift.tt/iUbRcCy