While fearful of what a second Trump administration would mean for immigrants, rights advocates this weekend sounded the alarm over messaging on the southern border from Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee.
The vice president traveled to Douglas, Arizona on Friday for her first campaign trip to the U.S.-Mexcio border. There, she met with Border Patrol agents—she was photographed walking with them next to a barbed-wire-covered wall—and delivered what The New York Timescalled “one of her party’s toughest speeches on immigration and border policy in a generation.”
After Harris’ address, the Center for Gender & Refugee Studies (CGRS) expressed agreement with her that “we need to build a fair, orderly, and humane immigration system,” while also warning that her “proposed border policies would do the opposite.”
“Banning asylum and punishing people seeking safety only causes more chaos and dysfunction at the border, and more refugee deaths,” CGRS said. “We want real solutions to the humanitarian challenges at our border, too. But these policies of cruelty and exclusion fail us, every single time.”
CGRS urged Harris to embrace the #WelcomeWithDignity Campaign’s policy solutions: restore access to asylum at the border; support existing systems and launch new ones to receive and integrate people seeking safety; create a more effective and timely immigration system; and strengthen refugee resettlement programs and other pathways to the United States.