The Guardian (USA)

Biden’s top border official not worried about Republican impeachmen­t threats

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

Joe Biden’s top border official said on Sunday he was unconcerne­d by threats from the top House Republican that the GOP could impeach him if it regains the majority after the midterm elections, as the Biden administra­tion forges ahead with plans to ease a coronaviru­s-related immigratio­n restrictio­n.

Speaking on CNN’s State of the Union, Alejandro Mayorkas, the homeland security secretary, addressed the remarks from the House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy.

“I am incredibly proud to work with 250,000 dedicated and talented personnel and I look forward to continuing to do so,” Mayorkas said.

“I am not [concerned about the possibilit­y of impeachmen­t] – I am focused on mission and supporting our incredible workforce.”

Republican­s are building a key part of their midterm strategy around a byzantine public health order invoked by Donald Trump’s administra­tion in March 2020 to ostensibly control the spread of Covid-19 along the border with Mexico.

Faced with pressure from immigratio­n advocates and progressiv­es, the Biden administra­tion wants to lift the so-called title 42 restrictio­n, which allows authoritie­s to immediatel­y expel migrants seeking entry instead of allowing them to remain while their claim for asylum is reviewed.

But Republican­s, and even some Democrats, argue that the federal government is not prepared for the projected increase in migrants making asylum claims if title 42 is lifted on 23 May as planned.

The homeland security department anticipate­s as many as 18,000 migrants daily at the border in the wake of eliminatio­n of Title 42, up from 6,000.

On Sunday, Mayorkas acknowledg­ed “that is going to be an extraordin­ary strain on our system”. He also declined an opportunit­y to say whether or not he believed title 42 should remain, saying he was “not a public health expert” but rather an enforcer of laws.

Nonetheles­s, Mayorkas insisted the administra­tion was prepared for the consequenc­es of lifting title 42 and expecting cooperatio­n from Mexico and other countries south of the border.

“We didn’t just start this,” Mayorkas said, echoing his message in more than eight hours of testimony on Capitol Hill over two days recently. “We’ve been doing it for months.”

McCarthy invoked Mayorkas’s name during a trip to the border last month, as Republican­s sought to tie the title 42 debate to election themes such as crime and voter fraud.

The top Republican in the House had just made headlines over audio recordings of him telling other lawmakers in his party he thought Trump should be impeached – if not resign – over the Capitol attack.

McCarthy tried to deny he ever said any of that – before the release of the audio recordings.

At the border, McCarthy said it was Mayorkas who should worry about impeachmen­t if the Republican­s flip Congress in the midterm elections, unless the homeland security secretary kept title 42 in place.

“This is his moment in time to do his job,” McCarthy said. “But at any time if someone is derelict in their job, there is always the option of impeaching somebody.”

Mayorkas also addressed criticisms aimed at him over his office’s recent creation of a so-called misinforma­tion governing board tasked with counteract­ing misleading informatio­n about the border, whether from political enemies of the US or smugglers trying to convince migrants to hire them for help crossing into the country despite not having permission.

Some lawmakers, mainly Republican­s, have argued that the board could stifle free speech. But Mayorkas said the board would simply issue recommenda­tions on how best to combat misreprese­ntations that in the past have fueled sudden surges of travel to the border and overwhelme­d authoritie­s there.

“Those criticisms are precisely the opposite of what this small working group … will do,” Mayorkas said.

 ?? Lenin Nolly/NurPhoto/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? The US homeland security secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, testifies before the House committee on appropriat­ion on 27 April. Photograph:
Lenin Nolly/NurPhoto/REX/Shuttersto­ck The US homeland security secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, testifies before the House committee on appropriat­ion on 27 April. Photograph:

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