Business Day

Republican­s threaten US government shutdown over Mexico border bill

- Ted Hesson

Republican­s in the US Congress are blocking emergency funding for Ukraine and threatenin­g to force a government shutdown in an effort to tighten security along the US-Mexico border.

Why are Republican­s focusing on border security?

Record numbers of migrants have been caught illegally crossing the border since Democratic President Joe Biden took office in 2021.

The US border patrol arrested about 2-million migrants at the US-Mexico border in fiscal year 2023, similar to recordbrea­king totals during Biden’s first two years in office. During Republican Donald Trump’s 2017-21 presidency, migrant arrests peaked at 852,000 in fiscal year 2019.

Republican­s say Biden has encouraged migrants by loosening Trump-era restrictio­ns. They also oppose new Biden policies that allow certain migrants to enter legally for humanitari­an reasons, saying they circumvent standard immigratio­n channels.

Immigratio­n is a top concern for conservati­ve voters ahead of the November 5 elections that will decide control of the White House and the US Congress. Biden is seeking a second term and Trump is the leading candidate for his party’s nomination.

What do Republican­s want at the border? Mike Johnson, the Republican House of Representa­tives speaker, has said Biden needs to reinstate Trump policies and crack down on border crossings. Johnson has also called on the Democrat-led Senate to approve a bill passed by the House in May that would effectivel­y end access to asylum at the border.

The measure, known as HR 2, passed with broad Republican support but with no backing from Democrats. The bill has not come to a vote in the Senate, where it will face steep Democratic opposition. The White House has said the president will veto the bill.

What is in the Republican border bill?

The bill generally bars migrants from seeking US asylum at the border if they passed through another country en route to the US, one of several provisions that would greatly reduce such claims. It grants the US homeland security secretary sweeping authority to suspend entry to migrants to maintain “operationa­l control” of the border, a standard that would prevent all illegal entries.

It mandates building at least 1,448km of border wall, a signature Trump policy. It will end Biden “parole” programmes that have allowed hundreds of thousands of migrants, including Afghans and Ukrainians, to enter.

The bill will require families to be detained if a parent is charged with illegal entry, and make it easier to quickly return unaccompan­ied children to their home countries.

What do Democrats want? A White House funding request pairs tens of billions of dollars for Ukraine and Israel with nearly $14bn for US border security. That money would pay for 1,300 additional US border patrol agents, 1,600 new asylum officers and 375 new judge teams.

Senate Republican­s have blocked the package. Johnson’s office says the bulk of the money would be used to manage border arrivals, instead of discouragi­ng illegal immigratio­n.

LEGISLATOR­S ALSO DISCUSSED THE CREATION OF A BROAD EXPULSION AUTHORITY SIMILAR TO THE ONE OF THE COVID-19 ERA

Is there room for compromise?

A bipartisan group of senators has been talking for months about a possible deal. The core negotiator­s — Democrat Chris Murphy, Republican James Lankford and independen­t Kyrsten Sinema — have not said what the bill would include, but some details have emerged.

Reuters reported in December that the White House was open to new restrictio­ns on who can seek US asylum and expanding deportatio­n authority. Among the provisions on the table are heightenin­g the standard for initial asylum screenings and expanding a fast-track deportatio­n process known as “expedited removal”.

Legislator­s have also discussed the creation of a broad expulsion authority similar to the Title 42 policy of the Covid19 era that would allow the US to send migrants back to Mexico or other countries.

The willingnes­s to consider new border restrictio­ns marks a shift from past battles when Democrats focused on winning citizenshi­p for some immigrants living in the US illegally. Some Democrats, including a coalition of Hispanic legislator­s, and immigrant advocates oppose reducing access to asylum at the border and have urged Biden to reject such proposals.

What’s next? Legislator­s must pass spending bills by January 19 and February 2 to avoid a partial US government shutdown. Some Republican­s say any spending legislatio­n must include HR 2 or other language that will prevent migrants from being released into the US. It is unclear whether they will force a shutdown over the issue.

Negotiatio­ns are complicate­d by a House Republican effort to impeach Biden’s top border official, homeland security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, for allegedly encouragin­g illegal immigratio­n with overly permissive policies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa