Boston Herald

Border episode shows fallacy of leftist radicals

- By RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

It’s roughly the three-week anniversar­y of CNN reporter Jim Acosta repeatedly telling President Trump at a press conference that the migrant caravan is “hundreds and hundreds of miles away” and “not an invasion,” and objecting to a campaign ad that showed migrants climbing border walls — “they’re not going to be doing that.”

Now, thousands of migrants from the caravan have arrived in the border city of Tijuana, Mexico. Over the weekend, hundreds of them stormed a border crossing, climbing the fence and throwing rocks. U.S. border agents used tear gas to repel the mob.

Trump relied too heavily on the caravan as an issue in the midterm election, but the last week has shown how his critics were wrong to sneer.

It was convention­al wisdom in the press that the caravan was a concoction of Trump’s fevered imaginatio­n. It soon would dissipate, and even if not, take months to reach the United States.

The latest news once again puts the left’s radicalism on display. It’s not just that Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t should be abolished, border agents can’t defend themselves from an aggressive rabble.

Hawaii Sen. Brian Schatz wondered on Twitter if the use of tear gas violated the Chemical Weapons Convention (the answer is an emphatic “no,” and he deleted the tweet). Rep. Barbara Lee of California described the gassing of “women and children” as an atrocity and called for U.N. inspectors. Progressiv­e darling Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez compared the migrants to Jews fleeing Nazi Germany.

All of this rending of garments, despite the fact that the tear gas was directed at the adult males who led the charge, similar crowdcontr­ol tactics were used at the border during the Obama administra­tion and, of course, cops use tear gas during disturbanc­es involving fellow U.S. citizens all the time.

The larger issue at the border is the set of rules for Central American migrants. It allows adults with children and minors into the country while their (almost always rejected) asylum claims are adjudicate­d. They can easily abscond once admitted, and the laxity of the system is an incentive for more Central American family units to come.

By working out a possible deal with the Mexican government for migrants to stay in Mexico while they apply for asylum — and forbidding migrants who enter the U.S. illegally from applying — the administra­tion has hit on an approach to tighten up the current loopholes. But the deal with Mexico may not be final, and a California district judge, in what looks like another instance of resistance jurisprude­nce, has put an injunction on the policy regarding illegal entrants.

Trump has been wrong to portray the migrants as inherently threatenin­g — the overwhelmi­ng majority just want a better life — but we have the sovereign right to decide who does and doesn’t come to this country, and demand that it be an orderly, lawful process.

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