Ana the Ist
Aggressively serene!
- Feb 21, 2012
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No, this isn't correct. 750K is the total number of pending asylum cases.
You're getting that 750K number from here.
View attachment 353097
A jump of 30,000 in two months is more in line with the estimate of 180,00 - 250,000 per year, as I said before.
View attachment 353098
Furthermore, your own statement goes against your own claim. If 750,000 are being added to the backlog, how are millions managing to have their claim processed and being denied? (And then not deported, according to you)
Yeesh....alright.

Explainer: Asylum Backlogs
This explainer details how an ever-shifting policy landscape and extensive backlogs impact the asylum process in the United States. It describes what asylum is, how people apply, why such cumbersome backlogs exist, and what can be done in terms of solutions.

"Amid a global increase in forced migration over the last decade, the U.S. has experienced a significant uptick in the number of people seeking asylum. In fiscal year (FY) 2022 alone, USCIS received around 239,000 affirmative asylum applications, a historic high and a major jump from FY 2021, when USCIS received approximately 62,800 affirmative applications. This shift was driven by changing migration patterns, as well as the lifting of pandemic-related restrictions that affected migration levels in FY 2020 and 2021. Yet the record levels from FY 2022 were soon eclipsed in FY 2023, when USCIS received roughly 454,000 Form I-589 applications."
And....
"At the same time, in FY 2022, there were approximately 230,389 defensive asylum applications filed with immigration judges. This continued pre-pandemic trends, with defensive asylum applications increasing “nearly fivefold between FY 2014 (31,517) and FY 2019 (154,368).” Such dramatic upticks have made it difficult for federal agencies to promptly process claims."
So you have both....
239,000 affirmative asylum claims....and another 230,389 defensive asylum claims to prevent proceedings.
"As a result, there are serious backlogs of cases for asylum seekers in both the immigration court system and within USCIS. According to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University, by late 2022, there were 1,565,966 people waiting for their asylum cases to be heard. Back then, approximately 778,084 applicants were waiting for a resolution to their asylum claims in front of USCIS. The remaining 787,882 petitioners were in line to go before immigration judges to present defensive asylum claims. By August 20, 2023, the number of pending affirmative asylum cases alone had reached a whopping 974,571."
So in 2022...1.5 million people are waiting for their various claims to be heard, or resolved, about 780k each.
That's just asylum....and it went up significantly in 2023.
Anyway....check the various links throughout the page, they all refer to government funded studies or government reports. I understand it's complicated but you're just referring to a certain type of asylum application, ignoring the other, and ultimately arriving at a number far lower than the real problem.
I showed you that order from the president to ICE implemented early in 2021. The immigration courts that adjudicate these cases are in the states of their destination. The Border Patrol isn't showing up in Tennessee for example to deport anyone and unless they have an existing criminal record for a very narrow set of crimes....ICE isn't deporting them either.
That's according to Biden's orders.
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