Las Vegas Review-Journal

On the border

- Larry N. English Henderson

Politics these days has been reduced to optics and finger-pointing — and there’s plenty of the latter going around in the ongoing fiasco at the nation’s southern border.

Opponents of the president are understand­ably up in arms over the administra­tion’s policy of separating immigrant families seeking to enter the United States through Mexico. But, as usual, much of the rhetoric is overheated and beyond the pale. Can we move past the trite and offensive comparison­s between Donald Trump and Hitler that members of the “resistance” insist on offering?

Republican­s, meanwhile, are struggling to contain a potential PR disaster that many worry could cost them at the polls come November. The Wall Street Journal called the situation an “election-year nightmare.” For his part, the president has blamed Democrats for the situation and, predictabl­y, dug in against a public backlash while continuing to defend his “zero-tolerance” policy at the border.

Mr. Trump should instead show some leadership and humility and reconsider.

Can the adults in the room come together and recognize that we’re talking about children? Children — as many as 2,000 from April through May — who have been taken from their parents in an unfamiliar land and, at times, put into holding cages while their parents’ cases are adjudicate­d. Surely, there’s a better way.

This shouldn’t be about partisansh­ip or scoring political points with an eye toward November. The images of crying children being forcibly pried from their parents should be disturbing and unsettling to all, regardless of political preference. This mess demands that the administra­tion and Congress do the right thing and work to address what is clearly an intolerabl­e situation. There is widespread bipartisan support for ending the current policy, and the president should pay heed to a simple premise: children of any country should not be used a political pawns.

Rep. Kevin Yoder, R-kan., has called on Attorney General Jeff Sessions to shelve the policy of separating children from their mothers and fathers while Congress considers a fix, the Journal reported Tuesday. In addition, Sen. Ted Cruz, the Texas Republican who is no softie on illegal immigratio­n, said he will introduce legislatio­n that “would create new temporary shelters to keep families together while asylum cases are pending,” according to the Journal.

These would both be positive steps toward a more humane and sensible approach espoused by first lady Melania Trump and every other living former first lady.

The debate over the plight of these immigrant kids is symptomati­c of Congress’ inability in recent years to craft a more thoughtful and comprehens­ive policy that recognizes the vast benefits of legal immigratio­n while acknowledg­ing the urgency of securing and controllin­g our borders in an effort to deter illegal crossings. While it may be too much to ask for congressio­nal Democrats and Republican­s to reach a grand compromise on that divisive issue, surely Mr. Trump and Congress can quickly craft a more humanitari­an manner of dealing with families at the border.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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Fax 702-383-4676 the disgracefu­l Republican­s lick his boots and accept his lies.

I feel disgust. If there is any hope, it is in the hands of the women, the people of color, the recent immigrants and the millennial­s to stand up and vote. It is up to us, the remaining free thinkers, to encourage those people to get out and vote this year.

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