Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mexican president looks at border, points at Biden

- 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.

The Biden administra­tion insists that it inherited the worsening situation at the southern border, but even Mexico’s head of state isn’t buying it.

“They see him as the migrant president,” Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez-obrador said two weeks ago, “and so many feel they’re going to reach the United States.”

Mr. Lopez-obrador reasserted his view this week at a press conference that no doubt left the White House fuming. “Expectatio­ns were created that with the government of President Biden there would be a better treatment of migrants,” he said Tuesday. “And this has caused Central American migrants, and also from our country, wanting to cross the border thinking that it is easier to do so.”

In fact, the ongoing fiasco highlights that there are indeed consequenc­es for advocating open borders, relaxing restrictio­ns on entry for unaccompan­ied minors and providing unlimited door keys for desperate migrants. Border Patrol projection­s indicate that the current March surge will exceed by 60 or 70 percent the peaks during both the Obama and Trump presidenci­es.

Mr. Biden this week lamely attempted to discourage migrants, telling them to “stay in place and make their case from their home countries.” The administra­tion maintains all is well, but then takes steps to limit coverage of the detention centers. At least one Democratic House member called this the wrong approach, arguing that publicizin­g the realities at the border could discourage others from making the trek.

“They’ve got to do more to overcome the messages you hear in Central America,” Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-texas, told Axios. “The conditions are terrible for the children. The system is being overwhelme­d right now. No ifs, no buts about it.”

If anything good can come of this, perhaps it will nudge Mr. Biden to embrace that spirit of bipartisan­ship he promised by reaching across the aisle to craft a workable immigratio­n policy that rejects the extremists on both sides. Neither throwing everything open to all comers nor deporting everyone in the country illegally makes sense. A sane and compassion­ate policy must recognize the right of America to control its own borders, while acknowledg­ing the cultural and economic contributi­ons of those seeking to migrate here in search of opportunit­y and a better life.

Embracing the progressiv­e alternativ­e — “that people should be allowed to come to the U.S. on their terms rather than ours, and that it is our collective responsibi­lity to take care of them if they can’t take care of themselves,” in the words of Wall Street Journal columnist Jason L. Riley — will be a nightmare for the nation and the Biden presidency.

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