Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hitching the GOP wagon to caravan

Trump betting again on border

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — As the midterm elections loom, President Donald Trump can’t stop talking about the wall he wants to build at the border with Mexico — and a caravan of migrants, largely Central Americans, headed toward that border.

Trump clearly is betting that border Page 12A security, the signature issue that won him the Electoral College in 2016, will shield vulnerable Republican senators up for re-election and maybe even keep the House under GOP control.

The optics of caravan members swarming Mexican police on a bridge or

CARAVAN

crossing the river at the border of Guatemala on Friday could be the next big gift to Republican­s seeking federal office since Democrats began combing through now-supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s high school and college years.

The situation is not lost on Democratic leaders. On Saturday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., sent out a statement in which they charged, “The president is desperate to change the subject from health care to immigratio­n because he knows that health care is the No. 1 issue Americans care about and that Mitch Mcconnell, Paul Ryan, and Republican­s in Washington are making a mess of our health care system.”

Campaignin­g in Houston on Monday, Trump claimed Democrats “had something to do with the caravan” — a claim he did not substantia­te during the rally.

On Tuesday the White House held a conference call on the growing number — 521,090 — of inadmissib­le migrants apprehende­d at the Southwest border, after a dramatic drop for 2017 during the first year of the Trump presidency.

During the call a senior administra­tion official blamed “Democrat catch-and-release loopholes” for attracting family groups and unaccompan­ied minors from Central America who claim asylum as soon as they cross the border.

“The Democrats aren’t responsibl­e for organizing the caravan, but they are responsibl­e for creating an incentive for these people to come here,” GOP strategist and CNN contributo­r Alice Stewart told the

Las Vegas Review-journal. “It has to stop.”

“This is what he does best,” Democratic strategist Maria Cardona said of Trump. “He lies. He uses manufactur­ed events. He’s doing all of that on steroids with the caravans.”

She cited Trump’s assertion Friday in Mesa, Arizona, that Democrats will “want to buy ‘em a car,” maybe even a Rolls-royce. Trump told a rally in Elko that California­ns are “rioting now. They want to get out of their sanctuary cities.” The fact-finding group Politifact rated that statement “Pants-on-fire” false.

In a Monday tweet, Trump wrote that “criminals and unknown Middle Easterners” were mixed in with the caravan, only to admit to CNN’S Jim Acosta on Tuesday that he had “no proof on anything” involving Middle Easterners with the caravan.

On Tuesday, Vice President Mike Pence volunteere­d that “it’s inconceiva­ble” that there would not be people of Middle Eastern descent, given that “more than 10 terrorists or suspected terrorists” are apprehende­d at the Southwest border daily. That number is an apparent mash of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection statistic for more than 3,000 “special interest aliens” from

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