Friday, November 22, 2024

How many illegal migrants have actually crossed into the U.S.?

(BBC News) Kamala Harris is visiting the US southern border for the first time since becoming the Democratic presidential nominee.

Although numbers of migrants crossing this border have dropped significantly in recent months, Donald Trump has been attacking her and President Joe Biden’s record on illegal immigration.

Trump claims that “Kamala Harris has allowed 21 million illegals to pour in from all over the world.”

The Democrats blame Trump, saying he worked to block the passing of a bill that would have tightened up security at the border.

So what do we know about the people crossing it illegally?

US border officials record “encounters” with migrants, which include people who attempted to cross illegally and people who tried to enter legally but were deemed inadmissible.

These encounters have risen to record highs under the Biden administration but not to the level Trump claims.

Since January 2021, when Biden came to office, there have been more than 10 million encounters – about 8 million came over the southwest land border with Mexico.

Under the Trump administration, there were 2.4 million encounters on this border.

Encounters fell at the start of 2020 as arrivals slowed because of the pandemic.

The number of encounters is not a count of individuals who stay in the US as some migrants will be returned, and the same person can be recorded trying to enter multiple times.

These figures don’t include people who crossed the border undetected.

The US Department of Homeland Security has estimated there were 11 million illegal migrants living in the US as of January 2022.

It says about a fifth of them arrived in 2010 or later but the majority arrived before this time.

Both the Trump and Biden administrations used a COVID-19 public health measure to quickly return migrants at the border.

Between its start in March 2020 and its end in May 2023, migrants were expelled nearly three million times under this policy.

Despite this, encounters continued to increase, according to the Migration Policy Institute.

The factors driving this included a post-lockdown surge in crossings and political and economic instability in countries such as Venezuela.

In response, Biden issued an executive order in June 2024 to quickly deport migrants at the border.

This means migrants can be sent back without having their asylum claims processed, if the average number of weekly encounters exceeds a certain threshold.

A month after the order was introduced, encounters at the southern border fell by one-fifth.

Efforts by the Mexican government have also brought crossings down, including setting up new checkpoints and increasing patrols.

In May, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said that the number of migrants at the US southern border had halved from a peak of 12,000 a day to 6,000 a day.

The vast majority of people who cross the US southern border are citizens of nearby countries in the Americas.

Recent figures show that in the current financial year (October 2023 – September 2024), the most common nationality encountered at the southern border were Mexicans (617,770).

This was followed by nearly a quarter-million Venezuelans and almost 200,000 Guatemalans.

There have also been 36,920 encounters of Chinese citizens this financial year to date.

That’s 10,000 higher than for the whole of the previous financial year.

Trump has repeatedly said about illegal migrants that “many of them that are coming in are from prisons and jails and mental institutions, insane asylums.”

There are no publicly available figures on how many migrants have spent time in prison or in mental institutions, but there is data on how many have previous criminal convictions.

Of the 1.5 million apprehensions of people crossing the border illegally so far this financial year – and where Border Patrol was able to check against law enforcement databases – about 15,608 were of people with previous criminal convictions.

The most common conviction was for illegal entry into another country (9,545), followed by driving under the influence (2,577), and drug possession and trafficking offences (1,414).

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0jp4xqx2z3o

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