Los Angeles Times

Finger-pointing at the border

Xavier Becerra is taking flak for his agency’s role. But the whole government needs to do better.

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There is no doubt that President Biden inherited a bureaucrat­ic and humanitari­an nightmare at the U.S.-Mexico border. And there is little doubt that how his young administra­tion handles this crisis — and it is a crisis, even if White House image managers balk at calling it so — will help define his presidency, if for no other reason than his Republican critics will make sure it does.

Xavier Becerra, former California congressma­n and attorney general and current secretary of Health and Human Services, is right in the middle of it, though you’d hardly realize it given his low public profile since taking the job a month ago. His agency is responsibl­e for caring for unaccompan­ied minors taken into custody by Border Patrol agents and placing them with relatives or caregivers.

The knives may already be out for the new HHS chief. Critics complain that unaccompan­ied minors, whose ranks are growing fast, are spending too long in federal custody and not being connected quickly enough by HHS to relatives or sponsors in the United States. The Washington Post reported last week that HHS had more than 20,000 minors in its care, and an additional 2,200 were in detention centers waiting to be moved to the agency’s shelters.

Politico recently wrote one of those inside-the-Beltway pieces about how White House staffers “have grown increasing­ly frustrated” with Becerra “over his department’s sluggish effort to house thousands of unaccompan­ied minors” and “complaints he’s been slow to take charge of the response since his confirmati­on on March 18.”

Really. After a month. And his tenure began nearly two months into the Biden presidency, which means the White House has had more time than Becerra to come up with workable solutions. Yet some now seem ready to set up Becerra as the fall guy if the problem worsens and the politics get uglier. We’re no apologists for Becerra — although we supported his nomination, we criticized some of his work as attorney general — but we at least are generous enough to give him time to figure out the job before pinning failures on him.

In truth, the Biden administra­tion so far seems to be reacting to events at the border rather than coming up with the kinds of broad and creative responses the problem needs. Again, it’s early, but the issues posed by unaccompan­ied minors are not new, and even if the Trump administra­tion didn’t cooperate significan­tly in the transition, this is not Biden’s first border rodeo. His team should have made crafting border responses a higher priority — especially given the harsh politiciza­tion of border policies.

It’s especially concerning that Biden has continued one of the Trump administra­tion’s more cynical practices. President Trump invoked the rarely used Title 42 powers, which allow the quarantine of foreign travelers suspected of carrying infections, to bar entry by people from countries with high rates of COVID-19, despite murky legal authority to do so (yes, there are legal challenges).

The move also contradict­ed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which determined that the quarantine was unnecessar­y to protect public health. Biden has suspended Title 42 for unaccompan­ied children (two-thirds of whom are boys between the ages of 15 and 17) but is still using it to block most families and adult migrants, thousands of whom have been stranded in dangerous squalor just over the border.

Few expected Biden to take the oath and immediatel­y resolve the many problems in the U.S. immigratio­n system. The damage over four years of Trump’s wrecking ball was substantia­l, and some migrants have told journalist­s that they were emboldened by a change in administra­tions from one perceived as cruel to one perceived as accommodat­ing.

But in truth most would have come anyway, fleeing home territorie­s controlled by gangs largely outside the reach of corrupt government­s, beset by climatecha­nge-fed droughts and, most recently, damaged by two devastatin­g hurricanes. People flee for valid reasons and in most cases arrive at the U.S. border hoping to join relatives already here. Biden has asked Vice President Kamala Harris to steer diplomatic efforts to try to address those “push” factors, a daunting but necessary task that also risks making Harris the face of whatever failure might ensue.

Responsibi­lity for border and immigratio­n enforcemen­t falls on an alphabet soup of department­s mostly under the Department of Homeland Security. But the children wind up in Becerra’s care. HHS needs to get better and faster at processing the arrivals and connecting them with relatives or otherwise finding them homes to live in as their legal requests to remain in the U.S. are processed. At the moment, the nation doesn’t have much of a sense that the new boss is doing much better at this than the old boss.

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