What A Day - Title 42 Gets 86'd
Episode Date: May 12, 2023Today marks the official end of Title 42, the Trump-era border policy that allowed U.S. border officials to expel asylum-seekers on public health grounds. We talk to Dara Lind, senior fellow at the Am...erican Immigration Council, about the end of the policy, and what the restrictions that the Biden administration is putting in its place.Republican-controlled state houses across the country continue to push anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, including Montana, where lawmakers have banned gender affirming care for trans youth, and also voted to censure Representative Zooey Zephyr. Erin Reed, an independent journalist and activist, joins us to talk about her work to make the country a better – and safer – place for transgender people.And in headlines: writer E. Jean Carroll is considering suing Donald Trump again, Daniel Penny has been charged with second-degree manslaughter in the chokehold killing of Jordan Neely, and the FDA has finally paved the way to allow more gay and bisexual men to donate blood.Show Notes:Immigration Impact: How To Seek Asylum (Under Biden’s Asylum Transit Ban), In 15 Not-At-All-Easy Steps – https://tinyurl.com/332kejkpErin In The Morning | Erin Reed – https://www.erininthemorning.com/What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, May 12th. I'm Abdul El-Sayed.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver, and this is What A Day,
which is about to give you an exclusive reveal of Abdul's tried and tested skincare routine.
Fire away, sir.
Juanita, you ready for this?
Let's go.
Be from Egypt.
Really?
But seriously, you thought I was going to give the secret away?
Of course I did.
You're giving me, though, maybe he's born with it, right?
Like, that's the vibes.
It turns out I probably was. So there's that.
On today's show, writer E. Jean Carroll says she may sue Donald Trump again. Plus,
we'll check in with journalist Erin Reid about her work to make the U.S. a better and safer
place for transgender folks. But first, today marks the beginning of a post-Title 42 border as the
Trump-era immigration policy, cloaked as a public health response at the height of the pandemic,
has officially ended. Title 42 allowed the government to expel migrants without giving
them a chance to seek asylum and essentially delayed the processing of asylum applications
since 2020. The end of the policy comes with an anticipated surge at the border,
as well as new policies and asylum restrictions from the Biden administration that bear in
all for resemblance to what the last guy did. And I don't say that lightly. I say that in the
context of the reality that our immigration system is beyond broken and Congress has refused to act
for decades. And now here we are facing another cycle
of a surge with no long term solutions. But this one wears aviators and eats ice cream. So there's
that. Oh, child. Oh, come on. But you're not wrong. According to projections by the Department
of Homeland Security, more than 10,000 people are expected to cross the border in the next few days,
and cities and counties in Texas and Arizona are issuing emergency and disaster declarations.
And this is where I turn to Dara Lind, senior fellow at the American Immigration Council,
to break it all down. Dara has been writing about immigration issues for about a decade, and she has even outlined the 15 not-so-easy steps
for migrants to seek asylum under the new policies. I started by asking Dara to outline
the impact that Title 42 has had over the past three years since it was invoked by Trump in 2020.
Take a listen. So the reason we call it Title 42 is because it is based in Title 42 of the U.S.
Code, which is not where you find most immigration laws. It's this obscure
public health law that was enacted decades and decades before existing immigration laws that
Donald Trump and his administration dredged up out of the law basement to, in the wake of the
COVID-19 pandemic, quote unquote, prevent the introduction of COVID-19, which was, of course,
already circulating, by preventing the entry of unauthorized migrants. So in practice, what this meant was that under
immigration law, if you come without papers, you are subject to rapid deportation if you're
immediately caught, unless you ask for asylum. The way that the Donald Trump administration
and then the Biden administration implemented Title 42 was they could instead decide, no, we can't hear you. You know, you can't ask for asylum. Instead, you would get expelled to
Mexico in a matter of hours, usually to Mexico and in some cases to people's home countries.
But the result of this is that lots and lots of people got summarily expelled.
Right. And I just want to remind our listeners that seeking asylum is individual's legal right.
Like, right. Like you can do this
legally. Yes. It is very clear in U.S. law that even if you enter the U.S. illegally,
it is still a legal right to seek asylum. And that is the kind of hard and fast standard that
the Trump administration really struggled with as it tried to restrict ability to seek asylum.
And the Biden administration has like worked its way around with its new
policies. Oh, let's talk about that, though, because now that the border policy is officially
sunsetting, you mentioned the Biden administration is already rolling out new restrictions in
anticipation of a surge of migrants crossing into the U.S. Now, online, I saw a conversation you
were having where the new restrictions went from 12 not at all easy steps to now 15. So can you break down the new rules and outline what they
mean for migrants who are seeking asylum? The structure of this is really convoluted, right?
Like I shorthand it as a transit ban, but like it's not really a ban. What it is is a series of
like very, very high bars that you have to clear. So if you are
currently in Mexico without authorization, or you've crossed into Mexico or Panama without
authorization, and you cross into the US, in theory, you should be able to just present
yourself at a port of entry and say, hey, I'm seeking asylum. And that's not even the
misdemeanor of illegal entry. In practice, access to ports of entry is severely limited.
And really, the only way to guarantee that you're going to get seen for asylum is to make an appointment on the CBP1 app.
Hold up, hold up, hold up.
I'm fleeing violence and danger in my home country, but you expect me to download an app and fill out some paperwork?
Yeah.
For the last few months, it's been used to request exemptions from
Title 42 to kind of, you know, if you're in danger in Mexico and people called it Asylum Ticketmaster.
Yikes. They've changed the way that it works now. So you have a day to register and then you log in
the next day to find out if you got an appointment. And in between, they're trying to make sure that
the people who have been registered and waiting the longest are preferred, but it is essentially a lottery. So like you stay and you keep playing the asylum
lottery, or you cross into the US between ports of entry and hope you don't get caught.
Because if you get caught, then you can't actually, it counts against you for seeking
asylum because this new Biden regulation doesn't apply at ports of entry. It only applies if you're
caught by border patrol, or if you otherwise enter without inspection is the technical term. And if that happens,
you are at the initial screening interview phase expected to clarify whether you have already
applied for and been denied asylum in another country that you came through before coming to
the U.S. If you don't have that, then
your standard for being allowed to even stay in the U.S. and see a judge rises dramatically. While
if you can't clear that elevated bar, you do get an opportunity to appeal it to a judge, like the
judge is applying the same much higher bar. So that's less likely. Then even if you can clear
that higher bar, you then have to go through the whole thing to a judge again.
Oh my God.
After you file your asylum application,
you have to demonstrate to the judge
not only that you were allowed to stay
and fill out the application,
but that you are eligible for asylum
and not having, you know,
applied for asylum in another country first
and been denied makes you presumptively ineligible.
This is heartbreaking.
I can't even imagine doing this many steps, let's be real, for cooking a meal, no less
trying to seek survival and safety.
And to hear these steps, it makes it so important that we talk about the human impact of these
policies.
Do you have any sense of how migrants are feeling or preparing
for these new regulations? I mean, it's really, really hard to communicate in advance regulatory
changes. Like it's hard enough just to get accurate information out there about what's going on.
Right. I'm going to be interested to see how this gets applied and communicated in the first few
days. I think that it's likely that, especially because the Biden administration has said that it is not going to keep families in
ICE detention, it is instead going to release them. And so they will be subject to this new
regulation, but they won't be detained and quickly deported. So I do wonder how quickly
it's going to get out there that the bar has gotten much higher. Yeah. And speaking of deportations also happening with the end of Title 42, is this new fast track approach known as
expedited removal, which means migrants will face more severe consequences if they enter the U.S.
unauthorized. And honestly, when I hear fast track, I hear alarm bells because I'm concerned.
Like, what do you make of this approach and what penalties would migrants face?
So expedited removal, it's been on the books for decades and it's been pretty broadly in use. This
is one of those things where the Biden administration is portraying itself as being
extra tough by saying, oh, we're going back to Title VIII. It's like, yes, Title VIII is standard
immigration law. But like expedited removal says that if you've recently entered the United States
and like the statute actually allows it to be applied much more broadly
than they are applying it now, and you're caught by Border Patrol, you don't have a right to a
hearing before a judge. That's why people who present themselves to Border Patrol like have to
say that they're seeking asylum or ask for asylum or otherwise indicate that they're being persecuted
because that's the only form of like guaranteed due process that you get. And that's why that
screening interview matters so's why that screening interview
matters so much, because the screening interview is what determines if you should be taken out of
this fast track and instead brought before an immigration judge to make your asylum case.
Something that I think is really important to note about this is that it's also in addition
to this fast track deportation process, it's also fast tracking the asylum screening interviews.
Those are now happening even before people get out of Border Patrol custody. So like a matter of a couple of days after they cross and they're in phone booths with the asylum officer
on the other end. So it's not super clear how you're going to like present evidence.
The thing about Border Patrol custody, in addition to them being, you know, they're not designed to
hold people for
more than a few days. And so there really are concerns about conditions. The other problem is
lawyers and the public and members of Congress, et cetera, don't get access to them. There's just
so little transparency. Right. Because it sounds like a black box. Right. So it's a black box where
this totally new regulation is being implemented that like only just got finalized.
So it's not like there's been extensive training on it. And where if you get denied, then you get
deported. So it's going to be hard to track people down and say, hey, did the US government treat you
fairly? So I just worry that this is like a perfect storm. We knew it was a mess when the
Trump administration did something similar to this phone booth thing in 2019. We didn't get like official government confirmation of that for two years because that's how long it took for the inspector general report to come out.
Too long after the fact. And that's what's truly concerning.
Right. So I'm just I'm very concerned that this is going to happen and that we're not going to see it.
That was my conversation with Dara Lynn, senior fellow at the American Immigration Council. And I honestly appreciate how real she was about the human impact of these policies,
but also the black box in which they're operating. Because at the end of the day,
I, like so many others, just want people seeking asylum and people who are migrants to be treated
with humanity first. I don't think that's too much to ask. I don't think so either.
Right. More on all of this very soon, but that's the latest for now.
Let's get to some headlines.
Sunday marks the one-year anniversary of the Topps supermarket shooting in Buffalo,
New York, where a white supremacist gunman killed 10 black people and injured three others. Yesterday,
New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit against the gunmaker, Mean Arms,
which sells an accessory that can lock how much ammo can be loaded into a semi-automatic weapon.
James argues that even though the company sells the device, it gives detailed
instructions to users on how to disable it, which in turn allows gun owners to get around New York's
law that bans high-capacity magazines. That very device was on the weapon that the Buffalo shooter
used to carry out the attack, but it was not engaged. The suit seeks to stop Mean Arms from
doing business in New York and also calls for
the company to pay civil penalties and damages. I can't believe that was a year ago, but then
right. Seems like very little has changed in that year because the man who put Jordan Neely in a
fatal chokehold while on a New York City subway has been charged with second degree manslaughter.
As you remember, video footage of the man putting Neely in a headlock circulated across social media earlier this month, leading to outrage and protests demanding justice.
The video showed the man, 24-year-old Daniel Penny, who is white, holding Neely down on the
floor of a subway car until Neely passed out. Neely was said to have been yelling and expressing
thoughts of self-harm, but did not physically attack anyone. The video also shows Neely being
restrained by two others. Neely was an unhoused black man who was known for his impression of the late singer Michael Jackson.
Following the incident, Penny was initially questioned and released shortly after.
He's expected to be arraigned in a Manhattan criminal court as soon as today.
Let me just say that we would not be here if it wasn't for the public outcry and the public
protest. So if you made your voice heard thank you because honestly this is
what should have happened the day that neely was killed that's right it's only been a few days
since writer eugene carroll won her civil suit against donald trump for sexual abuse and defamation
but she's now considering whether to sue him again her attorney said yesterday that she's
weighing a third lawsuit against trump after he continued to make disparaging comments about her
during what was in reality
a CNN-sponsored campaign rally on Wednesday night
as part of his 2024 presidential campaign.
Carroll, for her part,
told the New York Times yesterday
that she found Trump's comments,
quote, stupid, disgusting, and vile,
and said she'd been, quote, insulted by better people.
I mean, I just want E.J. and Carol to have peace.
She literally can't even savor the reality that she's got her name back
and found Trump liable of so many harmful things earlier this week,
only to now be faced with even more slander.
It's ridiculous.
It is.
But even if she can't have her peace, I hope she gets more of Donald Trump's money.
I mean, ka-ching.
If the thought of needles and blood make you a little squeamish, you might want to skip ahead.
But don't worry, this is good news.
The FDA has finally paved the way to allow more gay and bisexual men to donate blood.
The new guidelines roll back a decades-long policy that came during the height of the AIDS crisis in the 1980s,
which, up until recently, prohibited men who have sex with men from giving blood.
The policy was recently revised to allow them to give blood, but only if they are in monogamous
relationships, and if they abstain from sex for at least three months. Moving forward,
potential donors who identify as gay or bisexual can forego the abstinence requirement,
and all donors will have to fill out a questionnaire about their own individual
risk for HIV. The shift follows similar guidelines already in place in the UK and Canada.
This could both increase the blood supply and maintain its safety, which is important for anyone who
needs a blood transfusion. So if you're considering whether or not to give blood,
trust us on this, you're doing a lot of good for a few moments of discomfort.
And they give you a cookie afterwards.
Look, all I got to say about this one is finally it's about damn time because
that rule, that guideline was ridiculous.
Yeah, medical discrimination, not good. That part. Finally, it's about damn time because that rule, that guideline was ridiculous. Yeah.
Medical discrimination.
Not good.
That part.
And those are the headlines.
We'll be back after some ads.
Montana, Montana, Montana, a state that just can't do right, especially when it comes to
LGBTQ plus people.
Recently on the show, we covered the anti-trans bill that banned gender affirming care for trans
people under 18 years old, the harmful vote to censure Representative Zoe Zephyr, as well as
the hateful effort to keep her from working even in the hallway outside of the chamber at the
statehouse. To break down the anti-LGBTQ plus legislative push we're seeing in Republican
controlled statehouses across the country, I got to sit down with Erin Reid, an independent
journalist, activist, and she also happens to be Representative Zephyr's fiance. Erin is one of,
if not the most recognizable trans reporters out there who has been tirelessly covering anti-LGBTQ
plus legislation and policies across
the country for three years now. I started by taking a moment to celebrate pure queer joy
by asking Erin about her surprise proposal and how it feels to be a brand new fiance.
Take a listen, y'all. Amazing, amazing, amazing. I could not do everything that I do without her
support. And we have been through thick and thin together throughout all of this legislative cycle and everything. And it's just, it was such a
beautiful moment for her, for me, for us, and for all of the people that were there to celebrate.
And when I tell you I got goosebumps watching your video, I might've watched at least five times.
Don't judge me. I'm not a weirdo. I just love, love, right? And it was exuding from that moment.
And I want to know
what was going through your mind when Zoe called you to the front of the room. Were you expecting
this? Yes. We had talked about how the trans and non-binary representatives would stand in front.
So that's SJ Howell, as well as my partner, Zephyr, and how then they would like call their
partners on. And so like, I was expecting to be called on to stand beside her. Yeah. Yes. Like I was expecting to be called on to like stand beside her yeah yes like
i was expecting to get called on to stand beside her and then howell actually representative howell
spoke first and called their partner up they kissed and so then zoe got up spoke as well
delivered an amazing speech called me up and i'm like okay good she's about to kiss me she turns
around and instead of kissing me she drops to one knee and like I just I remember like
everybody's screaming it sounded like just this like a jet engine it was just so loud and I was
not expecting it my heart was beating really quickly I had a huge smile on my face we kissed
and she stood up and like I whispered into her ear that she had tricked me because it was so funny
she she tricked me it was in such a great way, though. The best trick ever. And I hope you felt the love. But that beautiful moment of side.
We're talking to you after a pretty insane few weeks for the two of you.
We've been following the story of Representative Zephyr's censure in the Montana state legislature, as well as her lawsuit against the state,
the anti-trans bill that banned gender affiraffirming care for people under 18 years
old, and the attempted SWAT on your home. Like, to me, this is screaming extremism. But why should
everyone, especially people outside of Montana, be concerned about Rep. Zephyr's censure and the
anti-trans legislation they passed in the state? Absolutely. So I think that Montana and what my
partner did there is emblematic of what the GOP has been doing all year long. You know, they focused on trans individuals, they've passed anti-trans laws that take away your right to medical care. And Zoe, she got up and she spoke. She didn't yell, she didn't scream. She just spoke very poignantly about the anti-trans laws. Instead of just passing it, they decided to silence her, to kick her off the House floor, to send her into the hallways, where she continued to work. Why this is so important is that this is
not the first time that they've done this. And it's not the only time that they've done it.
They're actually weaponizing these kind of tactics more and more. This is happening in
state houses across the country. In fact, as we speak, I am writing a story about how in Missouri,
they just had a gender-affirming caravan bill in Missouri, and they only gave 15 minutes for Democrats to talk.
And then whenever it came time for them to acknowledge Republicans to speak, there was a gay Republican who's against the bill who stood, and he kept his hand up the entire time.
They refused to acknowledge him because the Republican Party didn't want to acknowledge their own, somebody that was going to speak against the bill.
So, like, this idea that we can silence elected officials just because they're talking about LGBTQ policy, it's concerning. And this
is going to spread like this is going to continue. Right. It's coming to a state house near you if
it hasn't already. And so we've talked about a lot of the downers, the negative reality we're
facing, but there are some bright spots, including your newsletter, Aaron in the Morning, because you're giving people what they need. You're giving the breakdown
of anti-trans bills moving through state legislatures nationwide, but also a map of
where trans people can get quality care. And I know you have a full network of support that
helps you keep up with the hundreds of updates daily out there, but how would you describe the
method to the madness of putting together these maps and updates, but also the moment you realized how valuable these assets
are to other people? So I about four years ago, I put together a hormone therapy access map. So
this is essentially a way that trans people can look and find a clinic near them that provides
the care that transgender people need. And I did this because four years ago, whenever I first transitioned, I remember having to drive six hours round trip to get my care. Six hours? Yeah, yeah.
And I'm in the DC area. There were clinics in the DC area, but nobody knew about them. Like they
were word of mouth. And so what I did was I created a map that essentially showed where all of these
clinics were. And as soon as I released it, I started getting trans people in public just poured in information for me. They said, this clinic isn't
on your map, this clinic right here, the person is a little gatekeeper, you might want to add a
note there. And ever since then, I've been essentially mapping out all of these gender
clinics and allowing people to see where they can get the care. It's one thing to know that you're
trans, but then like to try to manage all the healthcare options. But it's another thing, whenever you can like click on a map and say, Oh, wait, there's a clinic 10 minutes
from my house, like I can actually do this. Access to healthcare is critical. And I know
that as a black woman who grew up poor, so if the entry point is not clear, it's another set
of barriers to even get what you need. Exactly. And that map's been viewed millions of times.
What I do now is I run something
called the legislative risk assessment map for trans people. What it does is it takes all of
the laws in the United States and all of the ways in which people have been targeting trans people
in these states. And I assess the risk that like really bad legislation is going to pass in each
state. I color code them everything from the worst anti-trans laws that are active right now to the
places that have extremely protective laws.
And people have used this.
I'm so glad we got a chance to talk about some of the bright spots because it's not
all gloom and doom.
And Erin, you're doing this hard work, but you're also wading through a lot of hate and
attacks on your own community.
And I can only imagine how exhausting and heartbreaking that is day in, day out.
So I got to know at a personal level, how are you protecting yourself, but also what's fueling your joy,
of course, in addition to Zoe? I think that right now, what keeps me going throughout all the hard
times, all of the difficult bills that I've got to cover, all of the words that are said about us
is how strongly Gen Z has come out in support of trans people. And like the energy that I'm seeing
from younger queer people and allies, I'm seeing school walkouts. I'm seeing these amazing trans
day visibility marches that were held all over the United States. It was the biggest day of
marches that I've ever seen. And then lastly, on a personal level, it's stories of individual queer
people that really give me joy. So I'll give you a really good example. I was on Twitter one day and I got a message from a young trans girl, 17 years old. She goes to a school in Southern
Louisiana, only 20 minutes from where I grew up because I'm from Louisiana myself. And as a young
queer kid, it was hard. I was heavily bullied and harassed and abused by my fellow students.
So she messaged me and she said, Hey, Erin, I just wanted to let you know I'm a young trans girl.
I go to the school in Louisiana and I was just nominated to the homecoming court.
I love that. I cried. I cried because to know that there was somebody where I grew up that was not
only accepted, but celebrated and like, they put her on the back of her car with her dad drove her
around the stadium, like waves at everybody. That's how you change things. That is how change
happens. And that's what gives me things. That is how change happens.
And that's what gives me hope.
That was my conversation with Erin Reid, an independent journalist and activist.
And when I tell you I had goosebumps as we wrapped up that interview, I am not exaggerating.
And you better believe we'll have her back on the show soon.
One more thing before we go.
Cricket's newest podcast, Pod Save the UK,
is on a mission to free the royals and the UK from the madness of monarchy.
Join hosts Nish Kumar and Coco Khan
as they give their takes on everything politics
from the other side of the pond.
Listen to the first two episodes now
and new episodes drop every Thursday
wherever you get your podcasts.
Well, that's all for today.
If you like the show,
make sure you subscribe,
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And if you're into reading
and not just Aaron Reed's newsletter like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe
at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
I'm Abdul El-Sayed.
And don't forget to hydrate.
I mean, that's the key to your skin.
I know it.
I know it for a fact.
It is.
Egypt's kind of a desert.
So you drink a lot of water.
So it comes out in your pores.
It's truly a whole thing.
Bless.
You and Gabrielle Union, hydration game on lock.
I'm convinced.
Absolutely.
I like to think of myself as being Gabrielle Union,
just not nearly as cool.
Plus.
I'm a substitute podcast host.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
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