The Arizona Republic

Sinema knocks it out of the park

- Phil Boas The Republic’s Post Phil Boas is editorial page editor of The Republic. He can be reached at phil.boas@arizonarep­ublic.com or 602444-8292.

You didn’t have to spend much time on social media this weekend to know that Kyrsten Sinema had hit her first big-league home run.

All you had to do was search “Kyrsten Sinema” on Twitter and then prepare to scroll and scroll and scroll.

A social platform that daily devours politician­s from head to hoof was throwing garlands of unbounded gratitude to Arizona’s senior senator.

Republican­s were lining up to confess they’d been wrong about Sinema and that pink tutu and now owed her a second look. Some said she was better than recent GOP offerings, the McCain’s, the Romney’s and the Bushes’.

It was the end of an another week in which Americans screamed at each other, and Sinema was standing out because she had quietly worked across the aisle to try to solve one of the pressing problems in the country.

The U.S.-Mexico border has been besieged with some 390,000 migrants who came with families this year to seek succor in our homeland, according to Customs and Border Protection.

Those numbers have reached some of the highest levels since the United States started tracking such data, reported Rafael Carranza,

Sinema has a plan to help relieve the pressure on the border, and she worked with Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., and other Republican­s and Democrats to iron out the details.

Together they proposed "Operation Safe Return," an initiative that would quickly determine which migrants lack a valid legal claim for asylum so they could just as quickly be ferried back to their homelands.

The idea is raising the hackles of some immigratio­n-rights advocates who fear such speed could result in migrants shipped back to dangerous settings.

However, Sinema’s proposal has a countervai­ling impact that could provide rapid relief to migrants who have valid legal claims.

By sorting out the unworthy you also identify the worthy asylum seekers. And if you can do that, you can get them the hell out of overrun and under-supplied detention centers.

“Families who pass the credible-fear screening would have the chance to claim asylum and be released under alternativ­e-to-detention programs,” reports Carranza.

Kyrsten Sinema told us a long time ago she was going to Washington to do things. Her first big splash was a mischievou­s dive into fashion that assailed the starched shirts on Capitol Hill.

But she has since then quietly gone about her business, leaving Trumpian food fights to others while she works behind the scenes, even meeting with the White House to craft a better border solution.

I’ve watched Sinema for 20 years. I’ve seen her march with Mexican immigrants in the streets of Phoenix. While her politics have matured into a work-aday pragmatism, I’ll never believe she lost her compassion for immigrant people. She’s been too long in the trenches with them.

However, some on the left shift uneasily at her border proposal and her willingnes­s to work with the other side. Those Democrats should heed the warning of a border authority who served in the Obama administra­tion.

“Polls reflect that most Americans want to see two basic things when it comes to immigratio­n,” explained Jeh Johnson, homeland security secretary from 2013 to 2017. “That we are fair and compassion­ate to those immigrants who have become honest and integrated members of our society (most notably the “dreamers”) and that we secure our borders.”

Earlier this month in a Washington

op-ed, Johnson wrote, “We cannot, as some Democratic candidates for president now propose, publicly embrace a policy to not deport those who enter or remain in this country illegally unless they commit a crime.

“This is tantamount to a public declaratio­n (repeated and amplified by smugglers in Central America) that our borders are effectivel­y open to all.”

At the end of a week in which much of the national and world news media framed the Republican president as racist, a number of the leading liberal pundits were not bashing Trump. They were warning the 2020 Democrats for president they will lose the election to him if they keep driving into the swampland directly left of sanity.

“Spare me the revolution,” wrote liberal New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman. “I was shocked that so many (candidates in the party whose nominee I was planning to support) were ready to decriminal­ize illegal entry into our country. I think people should have to ring the doorbell before they enter my house or my country.”

Show some common sense, wrote Friedman, or Trump is getting four more years.

Common sense in Washington wasn’t at the primary debates. It wasn’t leading the revolution.

It was ensconced in the Senate office building working out a complicate­d border problem and no doubt taking a moment to admire its stylish new pumps.

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