The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Both parties must stand up against cruel border policy

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Rep. Kevin Yoder has two daughters, ages 2 and 4. A busy schedule of political obligation­s requires the Kansas Republican to be separated at times from those precious little people. It’s a feeling many parents know.

Those two girls were on his mind recently when we spoke by phone to discuss the fates of thousands of would-be immigrant children who have been physically yanked from their parents at the southern border and sent off to live with strangers in foster homes and through government contracts with other facilities.

Yoder is the chairman of the Homeland Security Appropriat­ions Committee, and he had just returned from a two-day visit to the Rio Grande Valley at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Of the Trump administra­tion’s policy on separating children from their parents, he said, “I think we ought to keep families together.”

I daresay Yoder is not the only Republican in the House and Senate who feels empathy for the families being divided by U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s. But whether those sentiments can be transforme­d into the will to change current policy is anybody’s guess. After all, to make such a commitment would be to challenge President Trump.

A few days after Yoder and I spoke, McClatchy reporter Franco Ordonez broke the story that the Department of Homeland Security was scouting out military bases to warehouse children who arrived at the border without parents.

According to the reporting, more than 10,000 migrant children are being held at 100 government-controlled shelters, which are near capacity.

Congress is set to vote on broad immigratio­n packages next week. Yoder believes that something positive and bipartisan can happen this summer on immigratio­n reform if both Democrat and Republican­s give a bit.

He conceded that the U.S. needs more legal routes for people to arrive. Visas for necessary low-skilled, often seasonal labor are extremely limited, a problem that Congress could address.

Yet, like many members of the GOP, Yoder believes that we can control migrant pressure at the border simply by cranking up a policy knob.

The Trump administra­tion, for example, appears to believe that if we just treat people awfully enough — say, by stealing their children from them and locking them up like wild animals — they will stop arriving.

What that doesn’t take into account is the massive violence and dire poverty they are fleeing in the first place. Very few Central Americans ever achieve the goal of gaining legal entry through asylum, and yet they keep coming.

Yoder pointed out that passing some more reasonable and frankly humane laws, carve-outs that address only certain categories of immigrants without addressing enforcemen­t, will be met with a veto from Trump. The president will have to be served up some portion of his wall and funds for border security measures.

That’s a reality. And it is one that Yoder presents well.

It’s also his challenge. Because everyone has a moral responsibi­lity to stand up against what is wrong. All the more so when it’s someone else’s children, people whose plight will be determined thousands of miles away in the halls of Congress.

 ?? Mary Sanchez ?? She writes for the Kansas City Star.
Mary Sanchez She writes for the Kansas City Star.

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