{"id":7850,"date":"2014-10-16T16:51:20","date_gmt":"2014-10-16T20:51:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/live-immigrationreform.pantheonsite.io\/?p=7850"},"modified":"2018-12-28T14:40:28","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T19:40:28","slug":"mpi-provides-analysis-on-how-deportations-could-be-reduced","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/2014\/10\/16\/mpi-provides-analysis-on-how-deportations-could-be-reduced\/","title":{"rendered":"MPI Provides Analysis on How Deportations Could Be Reduced"},"content":{"rendered":"
On October 16, the Migration Policy Institute released a new report entitled \u201cDeportation and Discretion: Reviewing the Record and Options for Change<\/a>.\u201d The report is full of data on deportations of illegal aliens over a ten-year period (2003-2013). It looks at how the pattern of deportations has changed during the Obama administration<\/a> compared to the pattern during the preceding Bush administration.<\/p>\n The report is not just benign statistical analysis, however. It goes on to analyze how deportations might be <\/span>further<\/a> reduced. That is apparently aimed at the <\/span>Obama administration\u2019s stated interest in policy changes<\/a> that could be made by executive action to liberalize immigration enforcement. The report identifies the following steps that could reduce the number of deportations:<\/span><\/p>\n Why anyone would want to <\/span>reduce the deportation of illegal aliens is difficult for me to fathom, but that apparently is a central objective of the Obama administration\u2019s review of possible erosion of immigration enforcement policies currently being pursued.<\/span><\/p>\n The report\u2019s principal author, Marc Rosenblum had the temerity to state during the report\u2019s unveiling that there is not much difference statistically between the composition of deportations during the Obama administration compared to that during the Bush administrations, and that you could, therefore, say that the Bush administration adhered to the same prioritization for deportations as adopted by the Obama administration. The implausibility of that statement is obvious when it is recalled that the prioritization system adopted by the Obama administration was adopted in order to stop the deportation efforts against all but the highest priority cases. In 2007 and 2008, the Bush administration engaged in a number of enforcement activities such as worksite raids and prosecutions of employers for knowingly employing illegal aliens that have been virtually abandoned by the Obama administration. The result has been that illegal aliens are virtually assured that they can continue to work illegally in the United States as long as they do not engage in violent criminal activity.<\/span><\/p>\n To its credit, the MPI analysis does document the end to increased interior enforcement after 2009 and a major reduction in interior immigration enforcement beginning after 2011. That trend is a direct result of the administration\u2019s prioritized restrictions on enforcement.<\/span> \n