-Angela Valenzuela
Don't deport Venezuelans. Grant them temporary U.S. visas. | Opinion
By Lourdes Gouveia and Rogelio Sáenz| April 30, 2019 | South Florida Sun Sentinal
The
number of Venezuelans coming to the United States to escape the festering
political and economic crises in their country is soaring. As Venezuela falls
into deeper chaos and the Trump administration steps up its hostility toward
immigrants, their future in the U.S. is uncertain.
Today,
approximately 11 percent of Venezuelans are living abroad and the United
Nations projects that the percentage will continue to rise.
Today,
approximately 11 percent of Venezuelans are living abroad and the United
Nations projects that the percentage will continue to rise.
The
number of Venezuelan arrivals in the U.S. has grown dramatically over the last
decade. According to the American Community Survey, the volume of Venezuelan
migrants arriving here soared from 4,700 in 2007 to 49,000 in 2017, more than a
10-fold increase and the highest level of growth among all Latino nationality
groups.
Life is
increasingly dire for Venezuelans in the U.S., a message that we heard
repeatedly from many of the Florida-based Venezuelans we have surveyed since
2012.
This is
particularly true of the last wave of Venezuelan arrivals, whom we call
“precarious migrants.” They left after the 2013 oil crisis and Nicolás Maduro’s
ascendance to power. Prior arrivals reported investing substantial sums of
money in legal fees hoping to avoid “illegality.” Typically, they’d hop from
one status to another, negotiating a complex assortment of visas, all lacking a
path to permanent residency. Inevitably, many have fallen into undocumented
status. Today, among all visitors entering the U.S. from Latin America,
Venezuelans have the highest overstay rates and most lack resources to invest
in prolonged legality.
The
bulk of these precarious migrants are faced with few options. They either
become undocumented immigrants or apply for asylum at the risk of swift deportation
if unsuccessful. Asylum requests from Venezuelans soared five-fold from 5,600
in 2015 to nearly 28,000 in 2017. By 2016 Venezuela surpassed China as the
country with the most asylum applications.
President
Trump has proposed to cap refugee admissions for Venezuelans at 3,000 (about 10
percent of all refugee admissions) for fiscal year 2019 and has bad mouthed
asylum seekers as “con jobs.”
The
protracted crises forcing Venezuelans to flee to the U.S. are often deemed “too
general” to meet the narrow “fear of persecution” threshold required for
refugee admission and, thus, at least half of their applications are denied.
Until
now, Venezuelans have largely flown under the radar and escaped Trump’s
racialized wrath targeting migrants from Muslim and Central American countries.
Venezuelans have typically thought of themselves, and been viewed, as White,
professional, legal, and self-sufficient migrants. As their presence increases
here, that image may no longer shield Venezuelans from the anti-immigrant venom
fueling Trump’s restrictionist policies.
Geopolitical
considerations also have historically played a major role in U.S. decisions
concerning who deserves asylum (think Cubans and Nicaraguan contras versus
Salvadorans). Venezuelans were counting on that time-honored bias given Trump’s
fierce opposition to the current Venezuelan government and Nation Security
Advisor John Bolton summoning the Monroe Doctrine to warn Russia to stay out of
Venezuela. Unfortunately, Venezuelans’ timing is poor, as today’s fear of
immigrants trumps fear of Putin.
A
glimmer of hope opened up recently with renewed calls to offer Venezuelans
Temporary Protected Status (TPS). HR 549, the Venezuela
Temporary Protected Status Act of 2019, has already cleared the House. However,
the bill comes on the heels of Trump’s executive orders to rescind and stop
issuing new TPS for everyone. Indeed, the White House has not yet made an
official pronouncement of how it plans to deal with a growing backlog of
undocumented and asylum-seeking Venezuelans and there is notable right-wing
Republican opposition to TPS for Venezuelans.
Even if
TPS were to be granted, it is limited to 18 months of temporary protection.
Even if the political crisis ended today in Venezuela, it will take years to
bring about stabilization and safety.
In the
end, deporting Venezuelans will only aggravate the humanitarian crisis the U.S.
government says it’s trying to solve. In the absence of more stable alternative
solutions, TPS for Venezuelans makes sense and is urgently needed.
Lourdes Gouveia is Professor Emerita of Sociology and was the
founding Director of Latino/Latin American Studies at the University of
Nebraska at Omaha. Rogelio Sáenz is Professor of Demography at the University
of Texas at San Antonio.
No comments:
Post a Comment