The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Sting of Biden border policy spreads

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Recently, this column focused on the Biden administra­tion’s practice of allowing illegal border crossers to stay in the United States. Documents made public as a result of a lawsuit over border policy revealed just how many illegal crossers the administra­tion has admitted into the country.

The documents showed that 1,049,532 illegal border crossers were allowed to stay in the U.S. between Inaugurati­on Day 2021, the day Joe Biden became president, and May 2022. That is greater than the population of Wyoming, of Vermont, of Alaska, of North Dakota, of South Dakota and of President Biden’s home state of Delaware.

The real number is even higher, if one counts the socalled got-aways, who crossed the border illegally and eluded the Border Patrol. The number also does not include 190,053 unaccompan­ied minors who were allowed to stay. Put them all together, and Biden has allowed as many as 2 million illegal border crossers to stay in the country they entered unlawfully, and that’s in less than two years in office.

Many in the president’s party are happy with what is going on. Remember that the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al primary contest was essentiall­y a bidding war in which each candidate proposed progressiv­ely more permissive border policies. Biden is making good on his promises.

But now Biden’s policies are becoming a painful problem in some Democratic stronghold­s far from the border.

In April, the Biden administra­tion announced it would let even more illegal border crossers stay in the country by rescinding the Trump-era regulation that allowed authoritie­s to cite the need to stop the spread of COVID as a reason to turn migrants away. In response, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced that he would begin sending busloads of migrants to Washington, D.C.

On April 13, the first bus arrived. Then, in May, Arizona began sending migrants, too.

The buses kept coming. “In the last few weeks the number of buses arriving a day has increased from two to four, sometimes five, sometimes late at night,” the Washington Post reported recently, “exhausting donations and exceeding the ability of volunteers and mutual aid networks in the city to respond.”

That sounds a bit like the situation in Texas, doesn’t it?

At first, local officials, Democrats all, did not react publicly. But now, with more arriving every day, Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser is beginning to complain.

Bowser has claimed, without evidence, that Texas and Arizona have “tricked” migrants into boarding buses to Washington. (Both Abbott and Ducey have made clear that getting on a bus is entirely voluntary.) Bowser has said that local taxpayers in Washington “should not pick up the tab” for the cost of dealing with the migrant surge. And she is looking to the federal government for help.

For many migrants, Texas is not the final destinatio­n. They are hoping to get to destinatio­ns that are not on the border. The cost of their care has to be paid by somebody. It is a problem thrust on Texas and Arizona and other border areas by the Biden administra­tion. And now Abbott and Ducey are pushing back.

Recently, another voice jumped into the argument, New York City Mayor Eric Adams. The city has a right-to-shelter law, meaning officials are required to provide shelter to anyone who needs it. There has been a spike recently in people staying in the city’s shelters, with the system coming under tremendous strain. The mayor is blaming the situation on the border.

Both Abbott and Ducey said they are not sending migrants to New York (which is also a sanctuary city). “If these Democrat mayors are now that concerned about having migrants in their cities, they should call on President Biden to do his job and secure the border, instead of attacking Texas with baseless political accusation­s,” said a spokeswoma­n for Abbott.

Whatever the case, neither Mayor Adams nor Mayor Bowser should blame Texas and Arizona. Their real problem is with the president of the United States. The massive influx of illegal border crossers is a problem for all of the country, not just the areas closest to the border. When this argument erupted, Christina Pushaw, who is a spokeswoma­n for another Republican governor, Florida’s Ron DeSantis, tweeted, “If wealthy NYC cannot handle an influx of migrants, what makes you think small working-class Texas border towns can handle it?” Thanks to Abbott and Ducey, more Americans are now asking that question.

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