The Volokh Conspiracy
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Biden Grants "Parole in Place" to Undocumented Immigrant Spouses of US Citizens
It's a good policy, authorized by the law. But it will likely face lawsuits, nonetheless, potentially leading to a prolonged legal battle.

Today, President Biden announced a policy granting "parole in place" to undocumented immigrant spouses of US citizens who have been in the US for at least 10 years, and meet some other criteria. Those eligible can apply for parole status. If they get it, they will then have a three-year period during which they will have work permits and can apply for "green card" permanent residency (that status will eventually also enable them to apply for citizenship). Currently spouses of US citizens are already eligible to apply for green cards. But if they entered the US illegally, they are required to meet onerous conditions, such as first leaving the United States, and staying away for up to ten years. About 500,000 people could potentially benefit from the program.
The grant of parole will enable them to dispense with these requirements. Under Section 245 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, undocumented immigrants who have been granted parole may have their status adjusted to that of temporary legal residents. That adjustment would dispense with various penalties for unlawful entry, including the requirement to leave the US for a long period of time before applying for a green card.
The moral and policy case for this step is obvious. Granting legal residency to spouses of US citizens keeps families intact, and enables these people to work legally. The latter will benefit both their families and the broader US economy. And letting them get green cards without having to leave the country for many years also helps prevent cruel family separations. That has obvious benefits for the immigrants, themselves, their US-citizen spouses, and their children (who are also US citizens). Don't take my word for it! Take that of the social conservatives who have (rightly) insisted for decades that intact families are good for children, and for the broader community. If you believe in "family values," you have every reason to support the administration's new policy here.
Some will argue we must always enforce every law to the hilt, and thus that it is wrong to give illegal migrants any reprieve. But if you really believe all law-breakers should be punished, then you must also insist it's wrong to let off the hook the millions of Americans who routinely engage in minor traffic law violations or transgress a variety of other laws that are rarely enforced against most violators, such as the federal ban on marijuana possession. A "just enforce the law" approach would require authorities to punish a majority of adult Americans, as most of us have violated federal criminal law at one point or another (to say nothing of state and local laws and regulations).
If, on other hand, you think it's justifiable to forego punishment in cases where inflicting it would cause great harm or injustice, or where doing so diverts law enforcement resources from more important priorities, then there is a strong case for granting reprieves to undocumented migrants who fled horrible poverty and oppression. Their case for forbearance is actually stronger than that of those who engaged in minor speeding, marijuana possession, or other crimes that most Americans are happy to see go unpunished, in most situations. That reasoning applies with even greater force in a situation where a reprieve for the migrants would greatly benefit their US-citizen spouses and children.
The legal issues raised by Biden's new policy are more complicated than the moral ones. The relevant statute gives the president the power to grant parole entitling non-citizens to temporary legal residence, "on a case-by-case basis for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit."
This is the same statute under which Biden earlier granted parole to Ukrainians fleeing the Russian invasion of their country, and to migrants from four Latin American nations (Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Haiti, the "CNVH" countries) wracked by oppression and violence. A coalition of twenty red state governments filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of the CNVH program. In March, federal District Judge Drew Tipton (a conservative Trump appointee whose court the states picked because they expected him to be sympathetic to their cause) ruled the states lacked standing to bring the case. That ruling is now on appeal.
As in the CNVH case, there is a strong argument that parole for spouses of US citizens is backed by "urgent humanitarian reasons." Deporting such people (or requiring them to leave the country for many years to become eligible for legal residency) inflicts serious harm on their families, including many children. There is also a strong case that this grant of parole creates "significant public benefit." As already noted, keeping families intact benefits the larger community, as well as the families themselves. Again, don't take my word for it! Take that of pro-family social conservatives (as well as many social scientists across the political spectrum).
If, as is likely, conservative red states challenge the new policy in court, they will probably focus on the requirement that parole only be granted on a "case-by-case basis," and claim that the administration's rules are too categorical. This issue has come up in the CNVH case, and I addressed it in some detail in my amicus brief in that case (filed on behalf of the Cato Institute and MedGlobal, as well as myself) (pp. 11-20). I think most of the points made there apply to parole for spouses of citizens, as well. I summarize the most important points in a September 2023 article in the Hill:
[A]ny case-by-case decision-making must be guided by rules and presumptions, if it is not to be completely random and arbitrary. And it is entirely reasonable to presume that migrants from nations with horrifically oppressive governments, widespread violence and economic crisis, have urgent humanitarian needs.
The same goes for the presumption that paroling people from these countries will reduce pressure on the southern border, as it actually has [thereby creating a significant public benefit]….
Similarly, it is reasonable to presume that families have an "urgent humanitarian need" to stay together, and that keeping them together is a significant public benefit.
It is worth noting that parole in place has been used since 2007 to protect spouses of US military servicemembers from deportation (a policy begun by administration of Republican President George W. Bush). That policy, too, relies on general rules and presumptions: that keeping servicemembers' families intact is a humanitarian imperative, and that it creates significant public benefits.
As in the CNVH case, a legal challenge to Biden's new parole-in-place policy will raise standing issues. State standing issues in the two cases have some obvious similarities, but there may also be some differences. My own view is that states should have broad standing rights to challenge a variety of federal policies, including those that - like this one - I think should be upheld on the merits. But, in recent years, the Supreme Court and some lower federal courts have taken a harder line on state standing, including in some challenges to immigration policies. I may have more to say about standing questions later, once cases challenging the policy have actually been filed.
In sum, this is a good policy, and it is authorized by the parole power granted to the executive by Congress. But it will almost certainly be challenged in court, in what may turn out to be a prolonged legal battle.
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For any new readers of the Volokh Conspiracy who may be unaware, Ilya Somin is an Open Borders extremist. He puts forward a carefully cultivated facade of having nuanced and balanced opinions on immigration policy, but the reality is he has never supported any restrictions on foreigner nationals’ ability to enter our country at will. He is best disregarded when it comes to the immigration debate.
That's right. Somin came to the USA from Russia, and wants to flood the USA with foreigners. He also wants to abolish zoning laws, so that your neighborhood could be filled with hundreds of these migrants.
Roger is a racist of a racist background, who hates anyone who isn't white. (Prof. Somin is Jewish, so Roger doesn't consider him white.)
I see that you do not dispute my description of Somin. You just add your own name-calling.
Do you dispute that you are literally a son of a bitch?
An un-American bitch who improved America by leaving.
Point of Order: He's an Open Borders extremist *for America only*. He's very uninterested in letting Gazans immigrate into Israel or Russians immigrate into Ukraine. He's been asked to explain just why those situations are different, but has so far declined to do so.
Correct. Somin babbles about Libertarian ideals, but he is really just advocating for his ethnic interests. Like Russian Marxists, he is anti-American on most issues.
I think it's pretty obvious to all but the dumbest people how those situations are different. Those involve invading armies, not immigrants. Whereas people coming to the U.S. just want to work here and make lives for themselves.
The Palestinian Arabs and Russian civilians also say that they just want to work and make lives for themselves.
No, they don’t. (As I said: all but the dumbest people.)
So what? That people want to make better lives for themselves doesn't mean that they're good additions to a country with a distinct culture and its own economic challenges.
"...distinct culture..."
Please explain. I'm aware of more than one.
You'll have to expect some ignorance from our new racist cuckolds. Gernonen's mom only recently took away his white hood, so he is likely unaware how diverse America really is (and that we're better off for it).
How are we better off because of diversity, outside of restaurant choices? Please explain with specifics.
1. Restaurant choices are awesome, don't cut that out of the equation
2. 90% of talented scientists are born outside of the US. Leaving that talent on the table would be foolish
3. Rock and roll
4. Diverse groups are better at creative idea generation
5. Black twitter
6. Makes bad people like you wallow in resentment and misery
7. The Fast and the Furious franchise
8. The author NK Jemisin
9. America's agriculture's worldwide diversity gives us delicious resilience from avocados to soybeans to lemons.
10. Resilience of not having a monoculture
90% of talented scientists born outside of the U.S. are either white, Indian, or East Asian. They're not ugly, brown, 80 IQ Mayans from Guatemala.
I'm sorry you don't get to switch your bigotry from broad spectrum to narrow in midstream.
Honestly, it makes me question the sincerity of your white supremacy generally.
Very disappointing I'll never be sure that you're not just be a bored troll kind of loser not a bigoted loser kinda loser.
"90% of talented scientists are born outside of the US"
Talented scientists aren't coming across the southern border. Also, no serious person in the immigration debate is saying to restrict talented people from immigrating. Your argumentation is doubly a strawman.
Because we get talented programmers and engineers from Mumbai and Moscow, that means we need to import tens of millions of uneducated Hispanics.
That’s one hell of a sarcastic post.
Talented scientists aren’t claiming asylum at the southern border. Aren’t the vast majority of rock & roll stars white? Black Twitter - are you kidding? The F&F franchise adds nothing useful, never heard of NK Jemisin, human diversity has nothing to do with agricultural diversity, and monocultures like Japan and Korea seem to be doing fine.
America's culture was one of individual responsibility and self-reliance. It only changed because, not in spite of, immigration of third world migrants with third world, collectivist mentalities.
Like a housecat.
Convinced of your fierce independence while dependent on a system you don’t appreciate or understand.
Yeah, what’s the point of a border anyway? Or laws? Can't let that stand in the way of a vote.
The point of borders is so that governments can easily determine who they can collect taxes from.
Well no one is ever going to question your undoubted love of country. Just not sure what country.
Good point.
He's beyond extremist. He actually believes that Congress has no legal authority to regulate immigration at all.
Still not seeing where Congress gave Biden the authority to grant any form of mass amnesty. But haven't seen any respect for the law by the corrupt reptile yet so this is nothing new.
Still not reading the OP.
You really do hate to read!
"Case by Case basis" is not the grant of a power to give mass amenesty.
Yes, of course the lawsuits will come . They will come from the Family Values section of the political spectrum, (a wholly owned subsidiary of Cruelty, Inc.) because nothing says family values like forcibly breaking up families.
Send them all back. Solved.
The US agricultural industry is almost wholly reliant on migrant labour - you only send back enough to keep the rest terrified.
We finish mechanizing the agricultural industry so migrant labor is no longer necessary.
I'm looking forwards to In Dubious Battle but with robots.
McDonalds should have mechanized its kitchen 20 years ago...
"The US agricultural industry is almost wholly reliant on migrant labour"
False.
"Labour"
Lol, European
Yeah, it's going to turn out great for the agricultural sector, and not just that sector, if the border ever gets sealed up tight the way the hysterical right wants.
You're right Sidney, keep the family together. Very well, send the entire family back to their country of origin.
For one of the spouses, that country of origin might be the United States
I don't know about you, but if the US had refused to admit my fiancée, I'd be living in the Philippines today.
I would be living in another country as well. As a much younger man, I'd have said, "Adios America" and emigrated. My wife is even more unforgiving in her outlook; she waited 'in line' for a decade to emigrate to America. She played by the rules. She says that people who start off by disrespecting our rules already have the wrong orientation and attitude toward America, and only rarely does that wrong orientation toward America change for the better.
From what I see, she is right.
Once again, there is no "line." The people you guys are whining about are not skipping ahead in line rather than 'waiting their turn.' They will never have a turn the way the system is currently structured.
Yes, but they are "waiting their turn" here!
So what? I can wait in line and never get sold out concert tickets. It's not an entitlement.
The way the oppressive capitalist system is currently structured, I will never be allowed to live in your house. There is no "line" for me. I wasn't privileged enough to be born there, I don’t have enough money and I doubt I’m in your will. So my only option is to show up and break in. You good with that?
Are you calling DMN anti-capitalist?
You should have been shot as the thief you are.
It's a pity you weren't.
You say there is no line, and yet the American population has increased by about 100 million in recent decades. They are getting in somehow.
Needed: 100 million bullets....
Would you place former professor Volokh at the front or back of that line?
Execute them.
It's no less illegal than this is.
This is an affront to the concept of "rule of law" -- we all knew that the goal was amnesty and if that can be done, mass execution can also be done. This is what happens when rule of law gets ignored.
So let's hope that the courts throw this out.
Seriously, Ilya, that you'd support this policy and claim it legal was over-determined; Have you EVER admitted that an immigration policy you liked wasn't actually legal?
He's certainly not interpreting everything in his favor, Brett: "My own view is that states should have broad standing rights to challenge a variety of federal policies, including those that—like this one—I think should be upheld on the merits."
I wasn't asking if he'd ever admitted that people could challenge his favored policies. He'd have to be cosmically arrogant to deny THAT.
I was asking if he'd ever, even once, admitted that an immigration related policy he favored wasn't legal.
Have you, even once, proven that an immigration-related policy Ilya liked was not legal?
Seems to me that you should actually prove that before your criticism stands a chance to have any merit whatsoever.
Well to tell you the truth, I’m not sure that it isn’t mostly legal, because I haven’t looked at the line between current law and current regulation.
Currently a US citizens can apply for a green card for an illegal alien spouse, which normally does require 10 years outside the country for someone who has been here illegally.
But they can also file an I601 waiver of grounds of inadmissibility. That form lists the various situations and degrees of hardship required to grant the waiver:
“ Evidence that establishes why you may qualify for a waiver of inadmissibility, which depends on the ground(s) of inadmissibility that apply to you and should include evidence to show why we should grant you a waiver of inadmissibility as a matter of discretion.
Evidence to support your claim of extreme hardship (if applicable).
If applying for a waiver that requires you to a showing of extreme hardship to a spouse, parent, son, or daughter of a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident, you must submit evidence establishing the family relationship and evidence that shows the denial of admission would result in extreme hardship to your qualifying relative.”
That is the currently implemented version of the law.
So it really depends on the flexibility allowed by the statute in defining “hardship”, or “extreme hardship”. Currently family separation is not defined as extreme hardship I don’t know whether the statute would allow redefining extreme hardship to include family separation, and allowing most of these cases to qualify for a hardship waiver under current law.
However under current law I’d someone is granted a hardship waiver they would still have to return to their home country for a few weeks at least to interview for readmission and obtain a visa, which doesn’t seem a showstopper.
Egypt refused Gazans. Stated reason: They will disrupt us. Wide open west folk: Ok! Reasonable!
Just saying.
I'm in favor of it. But I love pointing out hypocrisy.
You think the left thinks Egypt's border policies are reasonable? I don't know if that's true.
On the other hand, I have seen Egypt's closed border used by the right as a knock on Egypt's morality, so hypocricy is correct.
I think it says a lot that Prof. Somin, a pretty mild writer in tone, has every immigration-related comment threads filled with personal attacks and demands he justify his broad political views, rather than engaging with his actual post.
I haven't always agreed with Prof. Somin's take on the law, but Section 245 of the Immigration and Nationality Act does seem on it's fact to allow this kind of action, as Prof. Somin lays out.
His standing discussion is also meaty.
Yes
Our country is divided between those who want open borders, and those who want to make America great again. The Biden administration is bringing in millions of undesirable migrants. Even if there is a legal way to legalize illegals, it should wait until we get the system under control. Somin is squarely on the side of open borders.
LOL tell us more about the corruption of the blood, you cartoonish bigot.
And absolutely talk more about what MAGA means. It's very helpful!
No one demands that India became majority non-Indian, or that Saudi Arabia become majority non-Arab, or that China becomes majority non-Chinese. Only white countries are demanded to replace themselves.
Anti racist is anti white.
Good point.
The Arab world would be a lot different if they were required to accept unlimited number of Chinese immigrants.
Not capitalizing White like the racist you are.
I for one, suggest that you remove yourself so that you can be replaced by...pretty much anyone else.
Racist fuck. Too cowardly to put your opinions behind your own name, because you know that people would find out who you are and ostracize you or worse.
Undesirable? I don't recall anyone asking for permission or approval for you to become an American.
He's mild in tone and utterly fanatical in content, on this topic. His position on immigration could hardly be more extreme.
Still not engaging with his post, I see.
Says a lot more about where you are, reason-wise, than Prof. Somin who keeps making arguments, some good, some bad.
By contrast, you wallow in the shallowest of places in Somin posts. Just whining about illegal immigration generally over and over again.
Person might draw a conclusion from that.
They don't want to actually deal with the arbitrary cruelty of making one parent in a family leave the country for ten years before even applying for a green card as their powers of empathy have shriveled to dust. The glib answer of some, just deport whole families away from the only place the other family members have known demonstrates the sociopathy even more clearly.
Volokh is full of commenters who never met a cruel policy they couldn't figure out a way of supporting.
There's a simple solution. Don't marry people here illegally.
The marriages aren't illegal. What you're refusing to do is actually address the fact that the current solution where a citizen marries somebody undocumented is that one of the spouses has to leave the country for ten years, regardles of how long they've lived here, regardles if they have children, regardless of what life they've created here.
You refuse to address this because you're a sociopath who thinks strangers are fearsome evil, and or you prioritize rules over humans.
No, he is prioritizing Americans over illegal aliens.
No one forces the citizen to marry an illegal.
Love is kind of a force. Not one you seem very familiar with, though.
I'm married to an American citizen woman, a concept you fags are unfamiliar with, whose family has been here since the 1820s.
Anyone who is against open borders get accused of racism and cruelty. No one has to come to the USA. There are other countries.
You're not against open borders. You are actively in favor of splitting up existing families. That is in fact cruel. How can you say it's not?
I am against open borders. The illegal alien should be deported. It is no excuse to say that a citizen aided and abetted the illegal behavior.
I'm also against open borders.
I'm just not a psycho about it.
Roger S is the more moderate of the sons of Phyllis Schlafly, if that helps you understand him.
The other is the Conservapedia guy.
Fine, we shoot them all.
That's humane...
If these spouses have been here for ten years then how can it be “urgent humanitarian reasons”?
How absurd is this?
Send all these illegals to Israel.
The urgent humanitarian problem is that without this new program the spouses who have been here will be forced to leave. A particularly urgent problem if Trump gets elected and creates his Deportation Force.
And you are a Trump supporter, correct?
At a certain point, it is up to the people to actually work on getting legalized.
As a country, we cannot wipe their asses for them.
Point of Law:
1. does this parole apply to illegals who have undergone or are undergoing some sort of deportation process? Or have failed to appear?
2. Is this a get out of deportation card if subsequently the illegal commits a deportable action?
Presumably not, since even someone who came here 100% legally, who did everything necessary and got a green card, can be deported if he or she commits a deportable offense.
I'm an immigration attorney, and this is a mess.
First of all, these individuals can file a request for a waiver of inadmissibility already. There's no guarantee, but the immigration system tends to be responsive to the concerns of US citizens.
Second, this only applies to those who slipped in undetected. Perversely, those who actually presented at the border and were inspected and admitted but stayed too long can't benefit from this, only those who evaded inspection.
Third, all this "as long as not a threat to security blah blah blah" means that USCIS is going to have to figure out how to basically vet someone for a green card in a parole in place case. Processing times are already miserably long, and this won't help.
Meanwhile, my Indian clients doing work the government has recognized as crucial to the national interest and approved for immigrant status must nonetheless wait about a decade before they're even eligible to apply for permanent residence.
This will only add to the bureaucracy and gum up the works for everyone who has been doing it the legal way from day one.
Exactly.
And why can't a spouse "sponsor" an immigrant spouse, agreeing to be financially responsible for him/her/it? Divorce notwithstanding.
Wasn't that the case with the "war brides" after WWII?
"And why can’t a spouse “sponsor” an immigrant spouse, agreeing to be financially responsible for him/her/it?"
That was actually a condition of the fiancé visa when my wife got one. I had to guarantee to support her, and pay any costs to track down and deport her if she ran, to get the visa.
Support agreements like that are still a thing.
Not sure about the 'costs to track down' bit. Never heard of that before.
Yeah, they're a thing, but there are no consequences if they're broken. And if we tried to deport people for becoming public charges, you people would be back whining about the "cruelty" of it.
Brett -- that I can live with.
That's NOT what Brandon is doing here.
“And why can’t a spouse “sponsor” an immigrant spouse, agreeing to be financially responsible for him/her/it?”
In this case, isn’t the “sponsor” part of the conspiracy to harbor an illegal? Did they at any time assist the illegal to work without documentation? Did all taxes get paid? What social security number was recorded on the tax forms? I'm thinking there were lots of federal and state laws broken over 10 years.
Lots of vetting of the US citizen spouse should happen with these cases.
"This will only add to the bureaucracy and gum up the works for everyone who has been doing it the legal way from day one."
So a resounding policy success?
Don’t usually see anti-immigration immigration attorneys, but you do seem knowledgeable.
Wait, though. USCIS processing time is not the issue!
The limiting factor for green cards for India and China is numbers, not process.
India has a lot of people seeking American citizenship and India gets the same allotment per year as much smaller countries. That’s why the wait is so long – what are you trying to pull?
(Look into Interested Government Agency waivers if the process is really your issue, though I usually see it for smaller countries without as much of a backlog for greencards).
“Case-by-case decision-making” means that each, individual case is judged on the merits, one by one. You tell me how that fits in with this EO, which grants a blanket parole to 500,000 people at once!
And no, I don’t find the following arguments very persuasive: “It is entirely reasonable to presume that migrants from nations with horrifically oppressive governments, widespread violence and economic crisis, have urgent humanitarian needs. The same goes for the presumption that paroling people from these countries will reduce pressure on the southern border…”
If we allow someone who illegally entered our country to be paroled because their country of origin was “horrifically oppressive”, then we’re basically just saying everyone in that country is so oppressed they can enter here illegally if they want to. That is a ridiculous argument. It would let even the very leaders of that oppressive country to come here illegally and "get out of jail free".
No, the reason for the case-by-case process is to make sure that only those people who are in fact oppressed and must flee for their lives are permitted to be paroled.
And to make sure they won't be permanent welfare cases.
You misspelled Illegal Immigrants Illlllya