Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIDEN SHOULD FINISH THE WALL

- Bret Stephens

The most harrowing story I’ve read in The New York Times in recent days was Miriam Jordan’s account of a car crash last month in Southern California involving a Ford Expedition that had come from Mexico, straight through a breach in the border wall. The Ford was crammed with 25 people when it hit a tractor-trailer rig on Route 115, 110 miles east of San Diego.

“Few of the survivors have been able to describe what happened next,” Jordan writes. “The crunch of metal and glass, the bodies flung dozens of feet across the pavement. Twelve people died on the spot, a 13th at a nearby hospital.”

Jordan follows the stories of the victims and survivors, and there’s a heartbreak­ing sameness to them: people who have been driven by fear or want from their homes in Mexico and Central America, and who are willing to take grave risks and pay exorbitant sums to make it to the United States. These are not terrorists, gang members, lowlifes, benefit seekers or — except in their willingnes­s to violate U.S. immigratio­n laws — lawbreaker­s. They are seekers of the American dream.

Yet those 13 people might not have met their grisly fate if the Biden administra­tion’s concept of compassion wasn’t also an inducement to recklessne­ss.

And they would not have been killed if a wall had been standing in their way.

That’s a conclusion I’ve come to reluctantl­y. Walls are ugly things: symbols of defensive, suspicious, often closed-minded civilizati­ons. Walls are, invariably, permeable: Whatever else a border wall will do, it will not seal off America from unwanted visitors or undocument­ed workers — roughly half of whom arrive legally and overstay their visas.

But a well-built wall should still be a central part of an overall immigratio­n fix. It’s an imperfect but functional deterrent against the most reckless forms of border crossing. It’s a barrier against sudden future surges of mass migration.

It’s also a political bargaining chip to be traded for a path to citizenshi­p in a comprehens­ive immigratio­n-reform bill. And it’s a prophylact­ic against the next populist revolt, which is sure to overtake our politics if the Biden administra­tion cannot competentl­y control an elementary function of governance.

That deterrent is needed now. U.S. agents apprehende­d 170,000 migrants along the southwest border in March, a 70% jump over February’s numbers and the highest level in 15 years. Notwithsta­nding the administra­tion’s claims to the contrary, there is a crisis.

Some of this surge is seasonal. And some can be dealt with by building more shelters for unaccompan­ied minors and families, or speeding up the process of finding relatives or others who can take in unaccompan­ied children.

But the administra­tion would be foolish to suppose the surge will recede on its own. The years of relative economic prosperity in Mexico that, for a time, led to a net outflow of Mexican migrants from the U.S. is over, thanks to a combinatio­n of drug cartels, a pandemic and the misgoverna­nce of its inept populist president. Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua are failing states.

There’s little question that our own migration crisis is a political boon for immigratio­n restrictio­nists. The wonder is why a serious Democratic administra­tion would aid and abet their cause.

It’s also putting the interests of comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform further out of reach. Congress has not passed a significan­t immigratio­n bill in over three decades. Biden came to office with an opportunit­y to get a bipartisan accord, but no Republican will sign on to legislatio­n that widens the doors to legal immigrants, much less one that offers some form of amnesty to illegal ones, without a serious plan for border security. Nothing accomplish­es that more visibly than a wall.

For Democrats, that’s an opportunit­y to defuse the political bomb Republican­s would love to plant right under them. And it’s a jobs-creating infrastruc­ture program to boot.

Will a wall solve all of our immigratio­n problems? Hardly. But for anyone who hopes for America to remain a proud nation of immigrants, it has to be a part of the solution.

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