Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Swarms of opportunis­tic Republican­s are invading the southern border

- Ruben Navarrette Ruben Navarrette is a columnist for The Washington Post.

DSan Diego id you hear the one about how separate groups of House Republican­s made multiple fact-finding visits to the U.s.-mexico border yet managed to find very few facts? That’s the spectacle that has played out over the past few weeks, now that Republican­s are in control of the House and have decided to make immigratio­n one of their legislativ­e priorities.

The GOP is eager to make political hay out of what it flippantly calls “Biden’s border crisis.” The party’s simplistic explanatio­n is that President Joe Biden personally invited millions of migrants and refugees from around the world to flood the U.s.-mexico border over the past two years by telling Border Patrol agents to stand down and opening up the gates.

Nonsense. If Republican­s were halfway sober and not intoxicate­d by opportunis­m, they would see that this new narrative — that Biden is a global mastermind capable of orchestrat­ing migration patterns of immigrants and refugees caused by war, natural disasters, a pandemic’s economic upheaval, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, etc. — conflicts with their former claim that the 80-year-old is feeble and incompeten­t.

Still, GOP leaders must think the immigratio­n issue is theirs for the taking. Democrats try to avoid the subject because it pits against each other two elements of their left-wing coalition: Latinos, who tend to favor more immigratio­n, and organized labor, which wants less.

Republican­s have their own civil war to contend with, between a nativist wing that worries the nation’s complexion is changing and business interests with increasing concerns about finding workers to do jobs that Americans are “quiet quitting” or not taking in the first place.

For now, it appears that the GOP has caved in to the nativists. Parroting the line that foreigners enter the United States to do harm, Republican leaders have recently made several excursions to the border. More are planned in the coming weeks.

A convoy carried members of the House Judiciary Committee, led by its chairman, Rep. Jim Jordan, R-ohio, to the border, where they held remote hearings. House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., got into the act by taking a handful of freshman GOP lawmakers on a tour of Customs and Border Protection operations in Cochise County, Ariz.

As a son of Central California, Mccarthy ought to know better. If the speaker really wants to see undocument­ed immigrants, he could take a delegation on a field trip to his hometown of Bakersfiel­d. That city is teaming with the undocument­ed, because the farming industry that keeps the municipali­ty afloat couldn’t survive without illegal immigrant labor. The farmers who profit from hiring the undocument­ed then turn around and send checks to Mccarthy’s reelection coffers so the Republican­s can bite the immigrant hands that feed him (along with the rest of the country).

It’s amazing to see so many Republican­s go to so much trouble to show that they care so deeply about a subject that they so obviously don’t understand. From their public statements and policy recommenda­tions, it’s clear that many GOP lawmakers have swallowed three whoppers — that the country is being invaded, that the nearly 2,000-mile border with Mexico can be sealed tight as a drum, and that there is some magic amount of enforcemen­t dollars that will stop immigratio­n in its tracks.

That’s a trifecta of idiocy. Wrong on all counts, folks.

Normally, GOP lawmakers, Fox News anchors and conservati­ve radio hosts would be talking about how all these immigrants are strolling across the border and taking jobs from Americans.

But this isn’t a good time for that argument, given that the U.S. unemployme­nt rate is just 3.4%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Just about anyone who wants a job can get one.

So all those noisemaker­s on the right wing — whose actual concern is the effect that immigratio­n has on changing demographi­cs — had to pivot to complain that the real threat coming across the border is illegal drugs, such as fentanyl, which apparently Mexican drug trafficker­s are forcing wholesome all-american kids in the Midwest to flirt with. What happened to that quaint Republican sermon about how all Americans need to take responsibi­lity for reckless actions and bad decisions? Where did that go?

Can’t anyone in this debate tell the truth about anything? That’s what we really need at the U.s.-mexico border — truth. Unfortunat­ely, that’s one thing Americans have learned not to expect from politician­s.

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