The Norwalk Hour

Biden left with few choices as immigratio­n takes center stage

- By Jonathan J. Cooper

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Almost immediatel­y after he walked into the Oval Office on his first day as president, Joe Biden began rolling back his predecesso­r’s immigratio­n policies, which he had assailed throughout the 2020 campaign as harsh and inhumane.

A lot has changed in three years.

Biden, now sounding increasing­ly like former President Donald Trump, is pressing Congress for asylum restrictio­ns that would have been unthinkabl­e when he took office. He’s doing it under pressure not just from Republican­s but from Democrats, including elected officials in cities thousands of miles from the border who are feeling the effects of asylum seekers arriving in the United States in record numbers.

With the 2024 presidenti­al campaign shaping up as a likely rematch between Biden and Trump, immigratio­n has moved to the forefront as one of the president’s biggest potential liabilitie­s. Biden, looking to neutralize it, has already embraced a sweeping bipartisan measure still being negotiated in the Senate that would expand his authority to put strict new limits on border crossings.

“If that bill were the law today, I’d shut down the border right now and fix it quickly,” Biden said last weekend.

The bill’s future is uncertain, and Trump has weighed in against it, but Biden’s Democratic allies have grown impatient for the president to act.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, a liberal Democrat, recently called on the president to call up the National Guard, and when he declined, she did it herself at the state’s expense.

“Every Arizonan should know we are taking significan­t and meaningful steps to keep them safe, even when the federal government refuses to,” Hobbs said in her state of the state address in January.

The influx has strained social services in cities including New York, Chicago and Denver, which are struggling to shelter thousands of asylum seekers without housing or work authorizat­ion. Images of migrants with nowhere to go camping out in public have dominated local newscasts.

Nine Democratic governors from all across the country sent a letter last week to Biden and congressio­nal leaders pleading for action from Washington “to solve what has become a humanitari­an crisis.”

States and cities are spending billions to respond but are outmatched by the record pace of new arrivals, wrote the governors of Arizona, California, Colorado, Illinois, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New Jersey, New York and New Mexico.

They asked for money to help with their immediate needs and a commitment to work toward modernizin­g immigratio­n laws.

“It is clear our national immigratio­n system is outdated and unprepared to respond to this unpreceden­ted global migration,” the governors wrote.

Trump, meanwhile, is eager to rekindle the passions that the border fueled during his successful 2016 campaign, when his vow to build a wall along the southern border with Mexico became perhaps his most familiar rallying cry.

“It has been a message that has resonated not just with Republican­s or Democrats, but across the country, because now even those liberal cities, those blue cities, those blue mayors, they’re saying we can’t handle the crisis anymore and give us help,” said Corey Lewandowsk­i, Trump’s first 2016 campaign manager. “It is a fundamenta­l shift in thinking over the last eight years on the issue.”

Trump lamented over the weekend that his border message didn’t resonate when he ran for reelection in 2020. He said it was because he’d done such a good job controllin­g the border that he “took it out of play,” though at the time voters were largely focused on COVID-19 and the pandemic had dampened job prospects for migrants.

“Literally we couldn’t put it in a speech,” Trump said at a campaign rally Saturday in Las Vegas. “Nobody wanted to hear about the border. We had no border problem. But now we can talk about the border because it’s never, ever been worse than it is now.”

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