Los Angeles Times

There’s a border crisis even if Biden won’t admit it

- JONAH GOLDBERG he lifting @JonahDispa­tch

Tof Title 42 — which allowed the government to use the COVID-19 pandemic as an excuse to expel migrants for public health purposes — has not resulted in “chaos” at the border, according to most news accounts. Intended or not, this is a great example of managing expectatio­ns. Because President Biden predicted things would be “chaotic for a while” after Title 42 expired, “chaos” at the border suddenly became the political metric to watch for, as if a monumental crisis absent chaos is no big deal.

On March 29, 2019, former Obama administra­tion Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson commented on 4,000 apprehensi­ons at the border that week. “I know that a thousand overwhelms the system. I cannot begin to imagine what 4,000 a day looks like, so we are truly in a crisis.”

Last week, just before Title 42 ended, 11,000 migrants were apprehende­d on Tuesday. On Wednesday, another 11,000. On Thursday, it dropped to 10,000 and on Friday it edged down to a mere 6,200. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro N. Mayorkas claimed this as proof that the Biden administra­tion’s postTitle 42 plan was working. He told ABC News on Sunday, “Over the past two days, the United States Border Patrol has seen an approximat­ely 50% drop in the number of people encountere­d at our southern border.”

This is typical of the larger problem. A talking point on a news show is no substitute for a successful policy. Pan out to a more meaningful unit of time, and you can see the disaster for what it is. In fiscal year 2022, a recordbrea­king 2.2 million migrants were apprehende­d, up from 1.7 million the year before.

The Biden administra­tion seems to struggle more with the “messaging” of the crisis than the actual crisis — which is why it has often agonized about whether to use the word “crisis” at all. Mayorkas refuses to say it, preferring a “significan­t challenge.”

Two things have ruined this media-focused strategy. First, the reality at the border, shown nightly on TV, and second, the remarkably successful stunt by Republican governors of sending migrants to big cities run by Democrats. After all, if millions of migrants crowding overwhelme­d border states isn’t a crisis, why should sending thousands to “sanctuary cities” be a big deal? But of course it is a problem — which is why the mayors of New York, the District of Columbia and Chicago have all declared emergencie­s, completely underminin­g the White House’s spin efforts.

Now, because of the end of Title 42, the administra­tion is scrambling to come up with a real-world strategy to stem the tide. Part of that strategy, to the horror of activists and liberal Democrats, involves restoring some of Donald Trump’s most controvers­ial immigratio­n policies, denying entry to migrants who do not first seek asylum in a transit country (or apply for asylum before reaching the U.S. border, using an app that is unable to handle the volume of requests).

This puts President Biden in a double bind. He’s already lost voters outside his base, and now his base may come to hate his immigratio­n policies too. Biden’s polling on immigratio­n is already a disaster, with his approval on the issue consistent­ly well below his already-low overall approval. A survey of seven battlegrou­nd states last month found that only 32% of voters approved of his handling of the issue. Embracing Trump-lite policies could erode that 32% without improving his standing with other voters if tangible success remains elusive.

Though it’s probably too late, one solution might be to look for bipartisan­ship. The administra­tion insists its hands are tied by existing immigratio­n law. Okay, then let’s write a new law. House Republican­s just passed a very tough immigratio­n bill that, among other provisions, would restrict asylum and restart border wall constructi­on. The Senate would never pass it as is, though it has sparked talk of bipartisan negotiatio­ns in the Senate. But Biden has already issued a veto threat, in part because it “does nothing to address the root causes of migration.” So now “comprehens­ive” immigratio­n policy has to solve all of the political, economic and climatolog­ical crises in South America? That’s a lot to ask. Besides, the root cause of the present crisis is the widespread, and plausible, belief that showing up at the border is worth the risk.

Allowing Republican­s to have a say in immigratio­n policy would not only buttress Biden’s constant rhapsodizi­ng about the glories of “unity,” it also would give the GOP some political ownership of the issue.

Sadly, Biden would rather continue to prattle on about unity while demonizing his opponents and unilateral­ly taking all the blame for the challengin­g situation at the border.

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