Old business for a new administration
What should the new Presidential administration do about the Department of Homeland Security and the associated laws, regulations, and homeland-security industrial complex?
Neither freedom of movement, other human rights, nor the DHS are among the self-described priorities of the incoming Biden Administration.
But for better or worse, it isn’t hard to come up with our short list of recommendations to the Biden transition team and to members of Congress who will be questioning nominees for Secretary of Homeland Security and other DHS leadership positions including the Administrator of the Transportation Security Administration.
The same agenda of unfinished business (PDF) that we called out in our submissions to Congress and the Obama transition team after the election twelve years ago still face the incoming administration today, three Presidential terms later.
These include actions that could have been taken by previous Presidents, and should be taken by the new President, by executive order or by promulgating regulations.
They also include legislation that could and should be taken up by Congress, as well as questions that Congress and the public should ask of nominees for the DHS.
We wish that some of this unfinished business had been attended to by previous administrations and members of Congress. But it hasn’t. The problems with the DHS and the attacks on freedom of movement are bipartisan. Nothing has been done by either Republican or Democratic administrations or members of Congress to address them.
But we’re here, and we’re not going away. Ignoring these problems won’t make them disappear, or silence the critics of the DHS and the defenders of the right to travel.
It’s time for the President and Congress to act — and for the public to resist if they don’t.