In his presidential campaign, Donald Trump has doubled down on bashing migrants crossing the southern border. Trump said migrants are criminals who are “poisoning the blood of our country,” reported The New York Times. The Republican National Convention was full of talk of surging “migrant crime,” even though such a rise does not exist.
The number of Americans who think the immigration level is
too high has sharply risen since
the last presidential contest in 2020, and as Americans move to the right
on the issue, Trump plans to
go much further than President Biden’s executive order in June, which closes
the border when crossings surge. Trump has said he would build “vast holding
facilities” — detention camps — to lock people up as their cases progress; end
birthright citizenship, even though the Constitution protects it; and bring
back a version of the travel ban from his first term, which barred visitors
from several mostly Muslim countries. Another Trump promise, mass deportations,
hasn’t been tried since the 1950s; now, polls show majority support for
it, including among Latinos.
But there is one anti-immigration proposal on the right that
Trump doesn’t talk about publicly. It’s a spin on “self-deportation.” The term
— for provoking immigrants to leave of their own volition — has gone out of
fashion but the idea continues to lurk. This time, instead of directly
pressuring undocumented adults to flee, some immigration opponents are
threatening access to school for their children. It’s a nuclear option —
requiring the reversal of a Supreme Court ruling that has been a linchpin of
educational rights for four decades — that some of Trump’s allies on the right
are quietly building support for.
In February, the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing
Washington think tank that’s become central to mapping out policy objectives
for the next Republican administration, recommended requiring public schools to collect data
on immigration status when students enroll. Heritage also said schools should
charge tuition for children who are undocumented or who have a parent who lacks
legal status.
About 600,000 undocumented children live in the country, and
another 4.5 million have a parent who is here illegally. To ensure that parents
can send their children to school without fear of immigration agents, the Biden
administration declared in
2021 that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement could take no actions of any
kind at schools and other locations where young people gather, like
universities and day care centers. It’s easy to see why schools are such a
sensitive site of immigration enforcement. Barring children from the classroom
punishes them for their parents’ decisions and disrupts families’ daily rhythm.
Most searingly, perhaps, it undermines the hope of bettering the lives of the
next generation — a reason for coming to the United States in the first place.
It has always been difficult to deter people from migrating
to the United States, given instability in their home countries and the lure of
economic opportunity at American businesses that depend on cheap labor. But
there is a grim logic to the strategy of keeping children out of school in the
United States — that if you go so far as to take away a right fundamental to
the American dream, people will leave.
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