- United States
- Mich.
- Letter
As a constituent, I urge you to prioritize immigration reform that fixes the legal process at the front end and reduces the need for large-scale interior enforcement operations. Our current immigration and asylum system relies on years-long delays followed by sudden surges of ICE activity inside U.S. cities. This approach is costly, destabilizing, and places due process at risk. People are instructed by the U.S. government to present themselves, apply for asylum, work legally, and wait—often for years due to government backlog—only to later face arrest and detention despite having no criminal history and having complied with the process as directed. When enforcement shifts deep into communities long after compliance, the risk of error increases, due process becomes secondary, and public safety and trust are undermined. A system that depends on late-stage, city-based enforcement is neither constitutional nor effective. It exposes families, communities, and law enforcement officers to unnecessary risk while failing to address the root cause: delayed and unclear adjudication. A functional alternative is straightforward: • Controlled borders that funnel claims to lawful entry points • Fast, binding asylum decisions measured in weeks or months • One meaningful appeal—no more • Quick legal status when claims are valid • Prompt, humane removal when claims are denied When decisions are timely and final, enforcement can occur early and predictably—at or near entry—rather than through disruptive and dangerous operations inside cities. Immigration enforcement should rest on speed, clarity, and due process, not backlog-driven raids. I urge you to support reforms that align immigration law with constitutional principles, public safety, and basic competence.