Asylum seekers who arrive at the United States southern border have fled their homes in search of safety, escaping conflict and violence. Seeking asylum is legal and a human right, long recognized in both U.S. and international law. 

The current administration's June 2024 executive order and subsequent September 30th amendment, in addition to the 鈥Asylum Ban鈥 rule of May 2023, run contrary to American laws and values. Upholding the legal right to seek asylum does not mean every person seeking asylum will be allowed to remain in the U.S. but these policies do rob many asylum seekers of a fair chance to present their case to an immigration judge. 

The U.S. government should reverse course and implement an orderly, humane and fair asylum process that protects people seeking safety and supports the communities across the country welcoming them.

Which border policies implemented by former President Trump did the Biden administration overturn?

The Biden administration has reversed some of the most restrictive border policies enacted during the Trump administration which curtailed the right to seek asylum.

This includes ending President Trump鈥檚 Migrant Protection Protocols, better known as the 鈥淩emain in Mexico鈥 program, that forced asylum seekers to wait in highly dangerous conditions in Mexico for their asylum claims to be adjudicated. By the end of the Trump administration, however, Remain in Mexico was rarely being used as it had been supplanted by Title 42

Although the Biden administration initially kept the pandemic-era Title 42 policy in place, using it millions of times to expel asylum seekers at the border without giving them a chance to request protection, in May 2023 the Center for Disease Control declared the COVID emergency over, ending the policy. However, in its place, the administration implemented an 鈥Asylum Ban鈥.

What is the asylum ban? 

In May 2023, the Biden administration adopted an 鈥Asylum Ban鈥 that bars people from asylum protection if they cross through another country on their way to the southern U.S. border, unless they previously applied for (and were denied) asylum elsewhere, or managed to make an appointment through the .

The 鈥淎sylum Ban鈥 remains in place despite an initially successful legal challenge. 

Most asylum seekers travel to the U.S. through Mexico, which is already one of the largest recipients of asylum applications. Although a viable country for some asylum seekers, the country faces record levels of violence and is not a safe place for many.

鈥淎 rule that denies people arriving at our borders asylum protection is antithetical to America鈥檚 nonpartisan spirit of welcome for refugees in need,鈥 says Kennji Kizuka, asylum policy director at the 探花精选.

Read a letter by 探花精选 Ambassadors Piper Perabo, Mandy Patinkin, Kathryn Grody, Morena Baccarin and others calling on the Biden administration to rescind the then-proposed asylum ban.

A mother and daughter sit across from each other at a table and smile for a photo.
Maria* and her daughter, Ashley, were forced to flee their home in Honduras when they were unable to pay the extortion fees enforced by local gangs. Maria and her two children have received support through an 探花精选-funded shelter in Ju谩rez, Mexico.
Photo: Paul Ratje for the 探花精选

President Biden鈥檚 executive order further limits asylum access at the southern border

On June 4, 2024, President Biden issued a  that temporarily suspends the right to asylum for people who arrive at the southern border away from an official port of entry or at a port of entry without a . An  was announced on September 30, 2024, tightening asylum restrictions even further.

Asylum seekers subject to the rule can still try to apply for more limited protections from removal but the executive actions make this more difficult and leaves them in legal limbo, without a path to permanent residence or the opportunity to reunify with family members left behind in their home country. 

With the executive order in place, the right to seek asylum will be suspended until the average number of daily southern border encounters drops below 1,500 for 28 consecutive days, an increase from the previous 7-day requirement. Daily southern border encounters have not consistently fallen below 1,500 since 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Encounters don't include people who arrive at a port of entry. However, the updated order now includes unaccompanied children in the calculation for daily encounter averages even though they will remain exempt from the suspension and related measures.

This order is harmful, counterproductive and illegal. The 探花精选 urges the Biden administration to reconsider actions that restrict asylum access and violate U.S. refugee protection standards.

鈥淎merica's asylum system needs upgrading to adapt to historic levels of global displacement and to address the humanitarian challenges host communities face,鈥 explains Hans Van de Weerd, 探花精选鈥檚 Senior Vice President for Resettlement, Asylum and Integration.

What is the CBP One app?

CBP One is a U.S. government  that offers limited appointment slots for people to request asylum at ports of entry. While the Biden administration has increased processing at ports of entry, many people seeking safety face months-long waits to secure an appointment. The app is available in only three languages. Given these limitations, people who don鈥檛 speak the relevant languages, have disabilities or lack smartphones may struggle to access the app and exercise their legal right to seek safety. 

The 探花精选 welcomes the U.S. government鈥檚 decision in August 2024 to allow asylum seekers to make CBP One app appointments from the Mexican states of Tabasco and Chiapas. However, the daily number of CBP One appointments should be expanded and processing capacity at ports of entry increased to provide asylum access while restrictive policies in the U.S. continue to limit refugee protections.

鈥淲e go on the application to see if we can get an appointment but it is not working," said Natalia, 22, whose family were forced to flee their home in Honduras. "We got the date, time, but the information cannot be submitted. We are stressed, with headaches."

An 探花精选 staff member shows a man how to navigate the complex CBP one app on his phone.
The 探花精选 team in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico explains how the CBP One app works to Jose David*鈥攁n asylum seeker from Venezuela.
Photo: Everardo Esquivel for the 探花精选

What can President Biden do to uphold asylum rights?

The 探花精选 urges the Biden administration to rescind the 鈥Asylum Ban鈥 and the June 2024 Executive Action and its September 30th amendment, which have suspended asylum access at the border. These actions further weaken refugee protection standards and send a counterproductive message to other countries hosting people seeking safety that refugees can be turned away at will. 

The U.S. should recommit to its long-held values of providing refuge for people fleeing violence and persecution while expanding safe pathways to protection that can alleviate pressure at the southern border.

We are also calling on Congress to pass the , which would  provide financial support to border and interior communities welcoming new arrivals. The administration and congressional leadership should strive towards building a fair and timely asylum process that considers the magnitude of the global displacement crisis.

Are deterrence policies effective at stopping people from seeking safety?

As people are forced from their homes due to conflict and persecution in search of safety, some countries have responded by adopting policies that try to dissuade people from coming to their borders. These policies consistently fail to deliver on their intended effects. Evidence shows that these policies, including U.S. attempts to deter asylum seekers, have not stopped people from arriving or applying for asylum. 

For example, average monthly of the U.S. southern border in the six months after the 鈥淎sylum Ban鈥 was adopted were virtually the same as the average crossings in the same period before the rule took effect.

Policies initiated during the Trump administration like the Title 42 expulsion policy and 鈥淩emain in Mexico鈥 similarly did not reduce migration nor improve 鈥榦rder鈥 at the border. Instead, they resulted in people repeatedly crossing the border to seek safety. 

Learn more about the border policies that have severely limited the right to seek asylum in the U.S. since 2017.

An 探花精选 staff member shows a woman how to navigate an 探花精选 resource on her phone.
Maria and her children attempted to claim asylum in the U.S. but were turned away under the guise of Title 42. 鈥淲e got to immigration and they told us no, no. There was no asylum for us鈥.
Photo: Paul Ratje for the 探花精选

What happens to people turned away at the U.S.-Mexico border?

U.S. attempts to deter asylum seekers do not reduce the number of people in need of protection. Instead, deterrence policies force asylum seekers into dangerous situations in Mexico, where individuals wait鈥攕ometimes for years鈥攖o apply for asylum in the U.S.

Confronted with impossible choices, others are pushed to make , irregular crossings of the Rio Grande River and harsh desert terrain, often guided by criminals who exploit them and take advantage of the confusion and desperation caused by new U.S. policy restrictions.

Lincy was one of many asylum seekers blocked from protection and stranded in Mexico due to the Title 42 policy.

鈥淢y process to reach the United States was approximately seven or eight months,鈥 says Lincy, who had endured abuse, violence and persecution in Honduras for being transgender. She originally planned to settle in Mexico, where her brother and sister-in-law live, but she never felt safe in Ciudad Ju谩rez, where vulnerable women are at risk of being kidnapped, raped and murdered.

鈥淚 left my country with 4,000 lempiras, which is like 200 dollars,鈥 says Lincy. 鈥淭here were places where we had to walk day and night. It was a terrifying experience, but necessary.鈥

Lincy sits at her desk, writing.
Lincy was granted asylum in the United States in May 2018 and is now building a new life as a fashion designer in Phoenix, Ariz., with the support of the 探花精选.
Photo: Andrew Oberstadt for the 探花精选

Further strain is placed on Mexico's asylum system

Mexico is one of the of asylum applications in the world. In 2023, the country received an unprecedented 140,000 asylum applications. The continuation of restrictive policies implemented at the U.S.-Mexico border is further straining Mexico鈥檚 still-developing asylum infrastructure to fulfill growing humanitarian needs

At the same time, Mexico is not always a safe option for all. Families and individuals  at risk of murder, rape, extortion and other violence. 

While Title 42 was in effect during the Biden administration, there were at least  against people returned to Mexico under this policy.

鈥淗ere in Tijuana, we鈥檙e in exactly the same conditions that people are fleeing from, everything from cartels and violence to gang presence,鈥 says Kathy Kruger, who worked for 探花精选-partner Casa del Migrante in Tijuana, Mexico. Local shelters and organizations like hers have made heroic efforts to help asylum seekers despite strained resources.

鈥淎s Mexico receives historic numbers of new asylum claims and the U.S. continues to implement policies that push asylum seekers back into Mexico, humanitarian infrastructure in the country is increasingly strained and more people are stuck in highly vulnerable situations,鈥 adds 探花精选鈥檚 Mexico country director, Rafael Vel谩squez.

An eight-year-old boy smiles and poses for a photo next to an 探花精选 logo.
Isa (not pictured) and her eight-year-old son were forced to flee their home in Honduras following threats from an organized crime group. Now in Tapachula, Mexico, Isa and her son received support from the 探花精选鈥檚 Emergency Mobile Unit in southern Mexico, where they are applying for asylum.
Photo: Everardo Esquivel for the 探花精选

How does the 探花精选 help asylum seekers who have arrived in the U.S.?

With over 120 million people displaced worldwide, the need for humanitarian assistance is at a record high. Incongruously, face the brunt of welcoming the world鈥檚 displaced.

The  works to support displaced people across the Americas by providing humanitarian reception, information services, legal advice, and supporting the social integration of new arrivals.

At our Phoenix Welcome Center, we work with local partners to provide food, water and clothing, basic medical assistance and referrals to hospitals, legal counseling, as well as child-friendly spaces, hygiene supplies, hot showers and overnight shelter.

An 探花精选 staff member speaks with a client.
Alex, an 探花精选 specialist who assists families seeking asylum, speaks with Marta, a young mother from Mexico, at the 探花精选 Welcome Center in Phoenix, Ariz. Since opening in July 2019, the center has helped more than 155,000 new arrivals.
Photo: Andrew Oberstadt for the 探花精选

Marta fled southern Mexico with her husband, Julio, and three young children鈥10-year-old Miguel, 7-year-old Maria, and 1-year-old Luna鈥攁fter she received anonymous death threats stemming from the growing gang violence in their community.

鈥淚 did it for my children鈥檚 safety,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 was so scared, I had no choice.鈥

鈥淭he 探花精选 helped us get in touch with the people we know [in the U.S.], new clothes and shoes for the children, warmer coats...so many things,鈥 says Marta. 鈥淚t was overwhelming and it really meant so much to us. We are so thankful."

The 探花精选 has also launched critical information services for asylum seekers and vulnerable communities. serves unaccompanied children who recently arrived in the U.S.

In other parts of the Americas: in Colombia, in northern Central America and in Mexico are part of our global Signpost project with partners including Mercy Corps, Google, Microsoft, Twilio, Cisco, Tripadvisor and Box. The digital platform includes an interactive map that connects asylum seekers and other displaced people to local shelters, health care providers and other services.

Marta, Julio and their children sit with their backs to the camera.
Marta, her husband, Julio, and their three young children. 鈥淭hey are really smart kids,鈥 Marta says of her eldest son and daughter. 鈥淚 want them to go back to school, because of what was happening, they missed some years.鈥
Photo: Andrew Oberstadt for the 探花精选

How can I help asylum seekers in the U.S.?

Write to the White House today to ask the Biden administration to rescind the asylum ban and latest executive action on the border, and uphold its legal obligations to welcome and protect asylum seekers. 

. The 探花精选 in Arizona's Phoenix Welcome Center helps parents and children seeking refuge in the United States to find safety and stability as they await their asylum hearings. 

. The 探花精选 provides critical support to asylum seekers on both sides of the U.S. southern border, including the 探花精选鈥檚 Asylum and Crossborder programs, which served nearly 50,000 people in need of protection in the U.S., with a warm welcome, case management and emergency assistance in fiscal year 2023 alone. In Latin America, the 探花精选 serves individuals and families who are at risk of violence and displacement in northern Central America and along the main migration corridors in Mexico, from the southern to the northern borders. We deliver a variety of services across the region, including preventing and responding to gender-based violence, safe spaces for women and girls, economic recovery and development services, case management, psychosocial support and health care through our emergency mobile medical unit. 

Learn more about what happens once asylum seekers arrive in the U.S.

*Pseudonym used for privacy