New York Post

A TALE OF TWO PRESIDENTS

Don, Joe both visit Texas for migrant check-in

- By DIANA GLEBOVA

On a day made for split screens and picture-in-picture, former President Donald Trump and President Biden made near-simultaneo­us trips to Texas on Thursday and offered very different prescripti­ons for the migrant crisis that has overwhelme­d authoritie­s at the US-Mexico border.

In Eagle Pass, ground zero for the most recent surge, Trump decried what he called a “Joe Biden invasion” of American territory.

In Brownsvill­e, 325 miles to the southeast, Biden, 81, demanded Republican­s in Congress “show a little spine” and approve a bipartisan supplement­al spending bill that he said offered “more resources” to address the crisis.

Trump, who arrived at his destinatio­n earlier in the day, was given a tour of the area by Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and members of the Texas National Guard, who showed off razor wire put up at a local park to deter migrants from crossing the Rio Grande into America.

“This is like a war,” Trump said before calling out a wave of highprofil­e crimes by migrants across America — including the recent murder of 22-year-old Laken Riley, a Georgia nursing student, allegedly by a Venezuelan national who was charged by New York officials with child endangerme­nt but released before Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t could send him back home.

‘The worst president’

Trump, 77, the Republican frontrunne­r for the presidenti­al nomination, said he had spoken to Riley’s parents and called her the “best nursing student there was” — but predicted that Biden would never dare to mention her name.

The 45th president also vowed he would reinstate hard-line border policies that were scrapped by his successor — including Title 42, which provided for rapid re

moval of asylum-seekers; and the Remain in Mexico policy, which required migrants to wait south of the border for their claims of persecutio­n to be adjudicate­d.

“This is a Biden invasion over the past three years,” Trump said. “I call him Crooked Joe, because he’s crooked. He’s a terrible president and the worst president our country has ever had.”

A few moments later, in Brownsvill­e, Biden said border agents “desperatel­y need more resources” in “order to secure our border,” but refused to announce any executive actions that Republican­s say he can take right away to crack down on new arrivals.

“We can’t wait any longer,” Biden said. “Months ago, my team began a serious negotiatio­n with a bipartisan group of senators . . . . It resulted in a compromise bill, it was the toughest set of border security reforms we’ve ever seen in this country.

“I understand my predecesso­r is in Eagle Pass today,” Biden said. “So here’s what I would say to Mr. Trump: Instead of playing politics with this issue, instead of telling members of Congress to block this legislatio­n, join me or I’ll join you in telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan border security bill. We can do it together.”

Asylum reform

Biden then spoke about the need to reform the asylum process, saying it takes “far too long” to decide a claim.

“Today, the process to get a decision on asylum claim takes five to seven years,” Biden said.

“You come in, you say ‘I have a credible fear’ . . . and what happens? You say, ‘Well, OK, you can come in the country but come back in five to seven years, maybe as many as eight years, and you get a hearing from — before a judge to determine whether you can stay.

“This encourages more people to come to the country if they got another five, seven, eight years before they have to do anything,” Biden went on. “With new policies in this bill and an additional 4,300 additional asylum officers, we will be able to reduce that process to less than six months. That would have a serious deterrent effect on those coming.”

“If a person who’s thinking about entering the United States understand­s the case is to be decided in a few weeks or months instead of five to seven years, they’re less likely to come in the first place,” the president said.

‘He already acted’

The president was questioned about Riley after the conclusion of his remarks, but did not respond as he walked off stage.

“Joe Biden said Thursday that ‘it’s time to act’ on the border crisis. Has Joe Biden forgotten the first three years of his presidency?” the pro-Trump MAGA Inc. super PAC blasted out in a responding statement.

The former president’s choice of venue was no accident. Eagle Pass has been at the forefront of a legal battle between Abbott and the Biden administra­tion over the state’s right to take action securing the border with razor wire.

By contrast, Brownsvill­e has been receiving dozens of illegal migrant crossings per day — a drop in the bucket compared to the hundreds who had been crossing into Eagle Pass before Abbott’s crackdown.

Trump said Biden “went to the wrong area” in a Thursday night interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity.

“They went to an area that the governor and myself have done a good job on where barely anyone is getting through,” he said.

Trump also suggested Biden followed him down to the border “once word got out” about the trip.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre refused to say why the administra­tion chose to go to Brownsvill­e specifical­ly.

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 ?? ?? ON THE FRONT LINES: Former President Donald Trump visits Eagle Pass, Texas, with Gov. Greg Abbott (left) Thursday, as President Biden meets with Border Patrol officers a mere 325 miles away in Brownsvill­e, Texas.
ON THE FRONT LINES: Former President Donald Trump visits Eagle Pass, Texas, with Gov. Greg Abbott (left) Thursday, as President Biden meets with Border Patrol officers a mere 325 miles away in Brownsvill­e, Texas.

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