The Columbus Dispatch

All sides hit Biden’s immigratio­n policies

Disapprova­l stretches from allies to public

-

– President Joe Biden is caught between a hard place and an even harder one when it comes to immigratio­n.

Biden embraced major progressiv­e policy goals on the issue after he won the Democratic nomination, and he has begun enacting some. But his administra­tion has been forced to confront unusually high numbers of migrants trying to enter the country along the U.s.-mexico border, and the federal response has inflamed critics and allies.

Much of the anger is centered on the administra­tion’s immigratio­n point person, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

“Getting hit from both sides in the matter of immigratio­n is no surprise,” Mayorkas said on NBC last weekend. “We are in the epicenter of the country’s divide, regrettabl­y.”

The result is that immigratio­n has become an early and unwanted distractio­n for an administra­tion that would rather focus on the pandemic, the economy and other policy priorities.

Just 35% of Americans approve of Biden den’s handling of immigratio­n, down from 43% in April, when it was already one of Biden’s worst issues, according to a new poll from The Associated PRESSNORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Immigratio­n is a relative low point for Biden within his own party with just 60% of Democrats saying they approve.

Images of Border Patrol agents on horseback blocking Haitian migrants from crossing the Rio Grande only added to the angst. While the widely shared photos incorrectl­y suggested that agents were using their reins to whip at mostly Black migrants, Mayorkas and Biden expressed outrage at the tactics and Homeland Security is investigat­ing.

The outcry was such that Mayorkas was asked if his department was a “rogue agency.” He responded, “I couldn’t disagree more vehemently.”

Some of Biden’s strongest supporters on Capitol Hill and among outside immigrant advocates had already been expressing outrage about the administra­tion’s continued reliance on a Trumpera public health authority, known as Title 42, to rapidly expel migrants, including thousands of Haitians.

Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigratio­n Law Center and onetime co-chair of a task force on immigratio­n meant to unite BIWASHINGT­ON

supporters with more progressiv­e primary backers of Sen. Bernie Sanders, noted that the White House “has appointed some of the best people in our movement” to help run immigratio­n programs. But she is among those opposed to Title 42, which the Trump administra­tion invoked early in the pandemic, ostensibly to slow the spread of COVID-19. It prevents people from making claims for U.S. asylum.

“This is the moment when friends need to have those courageous conversati­ons with friends,” Hincapié said.

The administra­tion’s refusal to halt Title 42 – even appealing a court order to stop relying on it to expel families – along with the lack of progress in Congress on a sweeping immigratio­n bill that Biden introduced upon taking office has prompted supporters to warn of a return to the enforcemen­t-heavy policies of President Barack Obama.

“They’ve been there for eight months,” said Todd Schulte, president of FWD.US, an immigratio­n advocacy group backed by some of the nation’s largest tech companies. “The policies that they are actively pursuing are very different than the ones they promised. The policies they are actively pursuing are failing. Yet the continued direction is in the wrong direction.”

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? A National Guardsman stands guard at a fence on the Rio Grande near the internatio­nal bridge in Del Rio, Texas.
ERIC GAY/AP A National Guardsman stands guard at a fence on the Rio Grande near the internatio­nal bridge in Del Rio, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States