New York Daily News

Homeland sec’y rebuffs GOP border ‘crisis’ claim

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas refused to call the increasing­ly volatile situation on the U.S. southern border a “crisis” while testifying before Congress on Wednesday and blasted Republican­s who sought to make him use the label as oblivious to the migration chaos caused by the Trump administra­tion.

Mayorkas’ appearance before the House Homeland Security Committee was focused on a recent surge in predominan­tly Central American children arriving at the border with Mexico hoping to claim asylum or other residency in the U.S.

Determined to turn the page on the Trump era, the Biden administra­tion is allowing unaccompan­ied migrant kids to remain in the U.S. while seeking legal status, resulting in some detention facilities for minors overcrowdi­ng at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic still poses a great risk.

But Mayorkas vowed that the administra­tion has a “plan to address” the overcrowdi­ng and took intense issue with Republican­s like Texas Rep. Michael McCaul, who claimed Biden has caused a “humanitari­an and border crisis” by scrapping a Trump policy that forced migrants to stay in Mexico regardless of age.

“A crisis is when a nation is willing to rip a 9-year-old child out of the hands of his or her parent and separate that family to deter future migration. That, to me, is a humanitari­an crisis,” Mayorkas said, referring to the Trump administra­tion’s 2018 family separation policy, which resulted in thousands of migrant children being torn from their loved ones, some of whom haven’t yet been reunified.

Still, Mayorkas conceded in his testimony that the Biden administra­tion could’ve done a better job in notifying some U.S. border communitie­s picked to host facilities for migrant teens and children now allowed to stay. He also acknowledg­ed that some migrants have been released into the custody of sponsors in the U.S. without first being tested for COVID-19, though he said a new policy has been implemente­d to prevent such breaches in the future.

While unaccompan­ied migrant children are now allowed to stay in the country, President Biden decided to keep in place a Trump order that instructs U.S. authoritie­s to expel most adult asylum seekers from the U.S. because of the pandemic.

The continuati­on of the public health order has drawn backlash from progressiv­es, who were banking on Biden to make a clean cut with Trump’s entire immigratio­n agenda upon taking office.

But Mayorkas, who immigrated to the U.S. with his family from Cuba as a child, said the pandemic is adding a complicate­d layer to reforming the immigratio­n system.

“We have a very serious challenge, and I don’t think the difficulty of that challenge can be overstated,” he said.

Mayorkas’ testimony, his first before Congress since being confirmed as Biden’s DHS chief, came as U.S. immigratio­n officials are reporting that the number of people caught attempting to cross the southern border has been rising steadily since late 2020 and last month surpassed 100,000. That’s the highest level since the pandemic began and is putting the U.S. on track to hit a 20-year high in migrant arrivals.

 ??  ?? Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas does not see a crisis on the Mexican border.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas does not see a crisis on the Mexican border.

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