Governor Kathy Hochul’s recent decision to pardon a group of migrants with decades-old convictions has been praised as compassion. For those individuals, it is life-changing: clemency shields them from deportation and gives them a chance to rebuild.
But clemency is supposed to be about principle — that justice should be tempered with mercy when people demonstrate rehabilitation. The real question is whether that principle is being applied fairly. In New York, it is not.
Hochul’s announcement came as immigration dominates headlines. By pardoning migrants, she signals solidarity with advocacy groups and positions herself as humane in the middle of a political storm. But when mercy is granted for political optics, it ceases to be about justice.
Meanwhile, thousands of Black New Yorkers — citizens whose families have lived here for generations — remain trapped by old convictions. They bore the brunt of mass incarceration, discriminatory policing, and harsh sentencing laws. They, too, have served their time and rebuilt their lives, but their records still block housing, jobs, and professional licenses.
Why do they continue to wait for mercy while the governor highlights migrants?
The Facts on Migrant Clemency
The migrants Hochul pardoned are not recent border crossers. Most are long-term residents — often lawful permanent residents with green cards — who became deportable only because of old convictions. Without clemency, ICE could use those convictions to expel them, even after decades of lawful residence. With clemency, that basis for deportation is removed.
This does not make an undocumented immigrant legal. If a person never had status, a pardon cannot create it. But for lawful residents, clemency can prevent “double punishment” — prison followed by exile.
The Double Standard
No one argues that mercy for rehabilitated migrants is wrong. The problem is selective mercy. Migrants are elevated as symbols of compassion, while Black residents with the same or lesser records are invisible. If rehabilitation is the principle, it must apply universally. If politics decides, it will always be applied selectively.
If Albany is serious about fairness, then clemency must also address the tens of thousands of Black New Yorkers still shackled by old drug convictions and minor offenses that destroyed families and futures. These men and women have gone decades without reoffending, yet they remain marked for life while politicians chase headlines elsewhere.
The uncomfortable truth is that Black communities no longer generate the same political spotlight. Migrants are today’s cause célèbre; Black citizens are yesterday’s crisis. And so mercy is granted not by principle, but by convenience.
The Cost of Hypocrisy
This selective compassion has consequences. It undermines trust in the justice system and deepens cynicism in communities who have heard endless talk of “equity” but rarely see it delivered. Clemency should never be a tool for press releases. It should be the restoration of justice for those who have earned it.
Governor Hochul’s pardons for migrants may have changed lives, but they expose a glaring hypocrisy. Clemency is good. Clemency is necessary. But when it is granted to some and withheld from others — migrants over Black New Yorkers, politics over principle — it ceases to be justice.
If justice is blind, then mercy cannot play favorites. Until the same compassion shown to migrants is extended to Black citizens who carried the weight of broken policies for decades, clemency in New York will remain less about fairness and more about politics.