Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden gets potential political lifeline from the GOP

White House has bungled border issue since the outset

- By Carl Golden Carl Golden is a senior contributi­ng analyst with the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University in New Jersey. You can reach him at cgolden193­7@gmail.

Cagle Cartoons Newspaper Syndicate

FOR three years, the Biden administra­tion has engaged in denial, blame shifting and halftruths before conceding the southern border is in crisis.

The change in attitude burst into the open last month, when the president said “significan­t compromise­s on the border” would be considered by the White House to stem the unpreceden­ted flood of illegal immigratio­n into the United States.

The president’s remarks changed the dynamics of the debate but infuriated the party’s progressiv­e left wing, who accused the administra­tion of caving in to Republican demands and returning to Trump era restrictiv­e policies — denial of asylum claims, arrests and deportatio­ns — the president himself repealed.

The American people would be encouraged if they believed the change represente­d an epiphany, an awakening in the administra­tion that its refusal to act exacerbate­d the financial and humanitari­an crisis that has befallen communitie­s along the southweste­rn border and a number of major American cities.

It didn’t.

The administra­tion’s hand was forced by a major dose of power politics, an “I’llgive-you-what-you-want-ifyou-give-me-what-i-want” accommodat­ion usually referred to in more polite terms as bipartisan compromise.

The deal would grant the administra­tion request for $100 billion in aid to Ukraine to continue its war against Russia and to Israel in its war with Hamas in return for significan­t changes in immigratio­n policy.

Republican demands that border security measures be included in the aid package placed the issue in the hands of a bipartisan group of senators to develop a consensus that could win approval in Congress and the White House.

The administra­tion desperatel­y needs the legislativ­e victory represente­d by aid for Ukraine and Israel and, while willing to accept more stringent border security measures, has recognized it must shed the perception that it is responsibl­e for an open border and the record influx of migrants into the country.

Mayors of New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, Washington, San Francisco and Denver have taken their grievances public, demanding millions in federal aid to deal with the rising migrant population.

They face cutting their education and police budgets, for instance, to provide funding for services to migrants. These mayors have come under severe criticism from residents and taxpayers who claim their needs are being ignored in favor of individual­s here illegally.

The administra­tion has bungled the issue since the outset. Its insistence that the border was secure was undermined by news accounts and images of border crossings in record numbers and migrants put up in hotels, police stations and airports.

Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas and White House press secretary Karine Jean Pierre clung stubbornly to an everything is under control narrative. Despite mountains of evidence, Jean Pierre attempted to shift the blame to former President Donald Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s. She has consistent­ly been on the defensive, scrambling for explanatio­ns and excuses while her credibilit­y crumbled.

Republican demands for including border security measures in the aid package smacks of legislativ­e hostage taking, but also offers the administra­tion a path toward recovering some level of credibilit­y to its avoidable immigratio­n position.

The administra­tion would have been much better off had it recognized and responded to the warning signs at the border, rather than allowing ideologica­l pressures and a desire to draw sharp contrast with Trump to dictate policy. Choosing to allow the issue to fester and produce an election-jeopardizi­ng headache was a badly misguided and amateurish decision.

As distastefu­l as it may be to the administra­tion, accepting the recommenda­tions of the bipartisan congressio­nal committee offers an opportunit­y to demonstrat­e they really do understand the severity of the problem.

How far the progressiv­e left is prepared to go to tank the effort remains to be seen. Dealing with them will require direct involvemen­t of the president.

Not only is addressing immigratio­n at risk, but the potential for failing to aid Ukraine and Israel would seriously weaken a politicall­y vulnerable president as he heads into his re-election bid.

The blame, though, lies squarely with the administra­tion. It continued to paint itself into a corner on immigratio­n and, rather than attempt to extricate itself undamaged, chose to send out for more paint.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? The internatio­nal border line separating Mexico, left, from the United States, in the Organ Pipe National Monument near Lukeville, Ariz.
The Associated Press file The internatio­nal border line separating Mexico, left, from the United States, in the Organ Pipe National Monument near Lukeville, Ariz.

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