The Boston Globe

Blame decades of lawmakers’ inaction, not Biden, for border woes

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Carine Hajjar’s April 7 Ideas piece, “Biden’s border bungle is souring America on immigratio­n,” focused on the Biden administra­tion as the reason for the problems at the border. I suggest instead that the blame belongs squarely with the last 20 to 25 years of congressio­nal inaction on our outdated immigratio­n laws. The problem has existed through at least five administra­tions, with each trying to get revised laws considered by Congress. President Biden is not the cause of the current situation.

Hajjar writes that “in February Republican­s canned a bipartisan border bill that they said didn’t go far enough.” It was “fashioned to get tougher on the border and illegal immigratio­n, but it also would have boosted the number of visas for legal immigrants.”

What she leaves out is that the majority of Congress supported the bipartisan measure, and it probably would have passed; however, the minority MAGA wing of the House received instructio­n from its lord and master, Donald Trump, to scuttle the bill, since it would have given Biden a win and might have helped solve the immigratio­n problem in this election year.

Further, the implicatio­n that there is resistance to an increase in visas for legal immigratio­n is questionab­le. Millions of businesses are struggling to find workers, and good orderly immigratio­n could address the demand and help keep the economy growing.

I agree with her closing statement that restoring an appetite for immigratio­n requires restoring order at the border. Congressio­nal revision of Title 8 and other outdated immigratio­n laws is the first step in the process, not building a wall of razor wire.

JOHN GREICHEN JR. Newport, R.I.

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