Las Vegas Review-Journal

Border crisis calls for thoughtful deliberati­on, not performati­ve stunts

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The immigratio­n situation on America’s southern border is a matter of grave national and human concern. There is genuine suffering on all sides. Our border states, in particular, are struggling, as too are the refugees flocking to America. As a nation we must find a path to sensible and sustainabl­e immigratio­n reform.

Any crisis, and especially this crisis, demands sober people operating with wisdom, a genuine desire to solve a problem even if it means reaching across the aisle, and the capacity to consider complex issues from multiple viewpoints.

Unfortunat­ely, last week a flock of Republican members of Congress descended on the U.s.-mexico border with all of the deep thought of magpies screeching in the wind. Serious issues require serious people; what the Republican study group offered was anything but that.

From a podium in Eagle Pass, Texas, House Speaker Mike Johnson delivered prepared remarks that included plenty of scripted attacks on President Joe Biden but little in the way of substantiv­e policy proposals or new ideas gained from the experience of being on the border.

This makes sense strategica­lly. Despite years of complainin­g about the southern border, the GOP has no incentive to actually solve the problem and deprive itself of one of its most compelling campaign boogeymen.

Unfortunat­ely for Johnson, R-LA., he wasn’t the only elected official to visit the border last week.

While the House GOP delegation staged events to deliver stale partisan attacks, Nevada Sens. Jacky Rosen and Catherine Cortez Masto spoke directly with law enforcemen­t personnel and nonprofit organizati­ons working to keep the border safe.

Afterwards, Rosen had a simple message: “Congress needs to stop playing political games and take real action to address the unpreceden­ted surge of migrant crossings at our southern border. … We need to deliver the resources and technology required to improve security at the border, stop the illegal flow of fentanyl into our country and fix our broken immigratio­n system and asylum process. Both parties must come together on this, and I’m committed to helping pass bipartisan legislatio­n to solve these problems.”

We agree.

Working with advocacy organizati­ons such as the ACLU, as well as the federal judiciary, Biden reversed the most abhorrent aspects of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies. We’re tempering our admiration for the president, as it’s seemed at times as though the administra­tion was dragging its feet. Neverthele­ss, Biden did successful­ly end the monstrous separation of children from their parents, fortified the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and expanded access for people in need of temporary humanitari­an protection.

All of this is an improvemen­t over the barbarity of the Trump years, but partisan gamesmansh­ip and stonewalli­ng by do-nothing House Republican­s have stymied efforts to address the larger crisis on the border. Nor has there been progress on the uncertaint­y of would-be Americans living without documentat­ion here in the United States.

Also, there has been very little progress in working with Mexico and Latin American government­s to find cooperativ­e solutions to the root problems driving the flood of immigrants: economic crisis, organized crime violence, etc. There are meaningful steps the Biden administra­tion can take in such matters of foreign policy that don’t necessaril­y require congressio­nal approval. We urge the administra­tion to ramp up efforts to make progress resolving these root problems. By the time people arrive at our border, government­s across our hemisphere, including ours, have already failed.

In the near term, lawmakers must find a way to unite and give business the tools to accurately track immigratio­n status and provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for those already living, working and paying taxes in the U.S.

While tackling the root problems in our neighborin­g countries, we must also create a functional and streamline­d process for quickly assessing asylum claims while keeping families together and protecting them from trafficker­s and other forms of abuse.

Finally, politician­s must stop using innocent people as political bargaining chips just because they are fleeing a hemispheri­c crisis and are now caught in America’s broken immigratio­n system.

We need more brave, clear-eyed leaders to follow the lead of Nevada’s senators and take up this problem holistical­ly and with a genuine desire for a long-term, humane solution.

 ?? ERIC GAY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Migrants are taken into custody Jan. 3 by officials at the Texasmexic­o border in Eagle Pass, Texas.
ERIC GAY / ASSOCIATED PRESS Migrants are taken into custody Jan. 3 by officials at the Texasmexic­o border in Eagle Pass, Texas.

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