Everyone Deserves a Lawyer. Pass the Access to Representation Act

Priya Vaikuntapathi


“Providing legal support will likely result in an additional 53,000 New Yorkers being able to remain in their communities. And yet, the government is not required to give them a lawyer, even though the rulings of these cases can result in traumatizing, life-altering consequences.”

Adi Talwar

Visitors entering 26 Federal Plaza in Manahattan, where many immigration court hearings are held.

Can you imagine a toddler sitting in court, their head barely popping up above the defendant’s table, looking around blankly? And the judge sitting there high above them, asking if they know what a lawyer is, waiting to send them to a country they have no memory of? That’s actually the current reality of unaccompanied immigrant children forced to face deportation proceedings without a lawyer.

The right to an attorney is enshrined in the Sixth Amendment of our Bill of Rights. It is a fundamental American right to ensure justice and due process in our court systems, except we deny that right to some of the most vulnerable in our country.

More than two-thirds of all immigration cases nationally are with children and unaccompanied minors who are unrepresented in court. And now, with President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign promise of mass deportation, it is even more urgent that immigrants facing deportation, especially children, have the right to a lawyer. New York must pass the Access to Representation Act, not just to ensure a fair and just trial, but also to reduce the immense backlog of immigration cases and the expenses of funding deportation. 




By Priya Vaikuntapathi , citylimits.org , CITY VIEWS: OPINIONS and ANALYSIS,Housing and Homelessness,Immigration,Justice,Opinion,Access to Representation Act (ARA),asylum,deportation,immigrant children,immigration court,legal representation,state legislature,trump ,

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2025-01-14 22:46:00 , City Limits , Everyone Deserves a Lawyer. Pass the Access to Representation Act

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