Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Open borders, again

- Michael Barone Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner.

BIDEN,” say the young demonstrat­ors’ T-shirts, imitating his campaign logo, “PLEASE LET US IN!” The picture ran in The New York Times, but one wonders whether whoever paid for the shirts got his money’s worth, for President Joe Biden’s administra­tion seems determined to let in as many immigrants as want to come.

The numbers are daunting. About 80,000 people tried to cross the southern border this January — about double the number in January 2020. That number could easily balloon this spring, traditiona­lly the peak migration season, with fewer covid-19 restrictio­ns in place.

And with less cooperatio­n from Mexico. The 2019 illegal surge was quashed by the Migration Protection Protocols, to which then-President Donald Trump got Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to agree. AMLO (as he is universall­y called) kept Central American would-be migrants inside Mexico, which reduced attempted border crossings and stifled coyotes’ smuggling business model.

Biden could have preserved that arrangemen­t up through AMLO’s term, which expires in September 2024. Instead, he rescinded the agreement by executive order and scrapped the program encouragin­g Central American asylum seekers to apply from their home countries.

One predictabl­e result: a sudden spike of what Democrats during the Trump presidency referred to as “children in cages.” As David Harsanyi explains in National Review, migrant children are being kept in detention facilities built by former President Obama’s administra­tion for children whose parents or guardians were detained after entering the country illegally and making (usually baseless) claims for asylum. Liberals bellowed protests when they held 2,000 minors in the Trump years. Now, under Biden, they hold more than 3,200.

In time, perhaps quickly, those held will be released and sent to purported relatives in the United States — often permanentl­y, since many don’t show up to asylum hearings. Many are infected with the coronaviru­s.

The Federalist’s John Daniel Davidson reports that more than 100 of those released tested positive for covid-19, and Greyhound is now demanding negative test results before migrants board its buses.

Locals aren’t happy with the inrush of illegals. The heavily Hispanic Rio Grande Valley produced one of the biggest increases in percentage­s of Trump voters last fall, and Laredo, Texas, Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar laments that “migrants are illegally crossing, potentiall­y exposing border communitie­s to the coronaviru­s and putting us at risk.”

Biden may have called Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s end to mandatory masking Neandertha­l, but the Biden administra­tion is apparently happy to send infectious illegal immigrants all around the country.

That’s reminiscen­t of how the Democrats most insistent on masks and lockdowns considered mass demonstrat­ions by “mostly peaceful” (often-violent) Black Lives Matter supporters last year to be just fine. The implicatio­n is that law-abiding citizens are less deserving of indulgence than angry demonstrat­ors or illegal immigrants.

While Donald Trump was questioned and mocked about his immigratio­n policies, so far the Biden administra­tion has gotten away with just waving aside questions.

Asked about the tripling of migrant children detained at the border, White House press secretary Jen Psaki referred questions to the Department of Homeland Security, which wasn’t answering questions either. “Ask them again,” she said. “It’s not our program.”

As for DHS, Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas reportedly said the surge of illegals is “overwhelmi­ng” and called for volunteers from the department to help at the border. But he doesn’t want to stanch the flow permanentl­y. “We are not saying, ‘Don’t come,’” he said last week. “We are saying, ‘Don’t come now,’ because we will be able to deliver a safe and orderly process to them as quickly as possible.”

This reluctance to defend and unwillingn­ess to explain a policy that is being put in place by facts on the ground suggests a suspicion that it’s widely unpopular. Candidate Biden made it clear he wanted a path to citizenshi­p for the estimated 11 million already in the country illegally, and administra­tion actions now invite many more to come in illegally.

This at a time when it’s not clear that the nation needs a new influx of relatively lowskill immigrants. The housing crisis of 2007-08 reduced net migration from Mexico to zero for several years, and it has never rebounded to 1982-2007 levels. The Trump policies, after some stumbles and adverse court decisions, curtailed Central American inflow.

The result is that total immigratio­n flow has tilted toward Asia and has produced a higher percentage of high-skill immigrants — just what those on both sides of immigratio­n arguments have said they want.

Now Biden is pursuing a policy that will tend to hold down low-skill wages at a time when many have been involuntar­ily unemployed for months. Why?

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