New York Post

State of disunion

Biden could stop the migrant crisis with a stroke of his pen – & It’s time he did

- JULIAN EPSTEIN Julian Epstein is the former Democratic Chief Counsel to the House Judiciary Committee.

IN table-setting his State of the Union Thursday evening, President Biden invoked the memory of Franklin Roosevelt but, according to nearly every poll, he may be headed in the direction of Jimmy Carter. While he certainly beat expectatio­ns for his performanc­e, Biden fumbled a major opportunit­y to reverse course on the leading issue of immigratio­n despite his 80% public disapprova­l on the issue. Instead, he opted for finger-pointing at the GOP and a likely half-step executive order next week. That strategy will fail.

Indeed, many of the president’s problems can likely be traced to his pandering to the hard left. His original sin — the bungled 2021 Afghanista­n withdrawal opposed by most of his senior military advisers — was a bow to the hard left’s isolationi­st impulses. His March 2021 $1.9 trillion stimulus — in a post-recovery but supply-constraine­d economy — was a foolish hat-tip to their deficit-spending, welfare-statist ideology which jetfueled the near 17% Bidenflati­on in three years and caused most Americans to lose income under his presidency and lose faith in his presidency.

Biden has never been a great orator or political salesman the way presidents Clinton and Obama were. He’s fundamenta­lly a patronage politician (think student-loan giveaways) with a lose-knit coalitions of groups he hopes make up electoral majorities. A little more than a decade ago, when Democratic centrism was fashionabl­e (remember when he was a vocal opponent of same-sex marriage?) Biden was also a hawk on immigratio­n, advocating English-language requiremen­ts and strict entry limits.

That was before the intersecti­onal-left activists, campaign organizers and the donor class commandeer­ed the policymaki­ng apparatus of the Democratic Party utilizing the flying monkeys of social media to shame and quash dissent. Accordingl­y, the Biden White House, thirsting to be the cool kids on the social media block, moved from hawk to dove on immigratio­n and ceded to the demography-is-destiny delusion that unassimila­ted migration will fatten the Democratic electorate.

Like the other leftist fallacies, the open borders shift has been a disaster: The president trails Donald Trump 30 points and Democratic voters also disapprove by large margins. As writers Ruy Teixeira and John Judis have pointed out for years, the open border is especially unpopular with working class voters, including the black and Hispanic working class who know that uncontroll­ed illegal immigratio­n is pushing down their wages, fattening profits of corporate elites and driving wealth inequality.

Let’s be clear: President Biden bears the responsibi­lity for the approximat­ely 8 million illegal migrant crossings on his watch.

Republican­s are entirely correct that, without any legislatio­n, he has the singular power to fix most of the problem with the stoke of a pen, as Presidents Trump and Obama did effectivel­y. The US Supreme Court has clearly affirmed that authority.

Upon taking office, Biden issued rafts of executive orders effectivel­y inviting millions of migrants to enter through the front door without as much as ringing the bell. Previously effective entry controls such as Title 42, Remain in Mexico, parole limitation­s and stricter asylum criteria were all purged from the administra­tion’s enforcemen­t toolkit, all to seemingly satisfy the unmoored demands of the hard left.

Fentanyl, terrorism, traffickin­g cartels, public safety, migrant skill sets, the diversion of billions of welfare dollars were all cans to be kicked down the road. Democratic stronghold cities across the country experience­d meltdowns when asked to manage only tiny fractions of the new migrant flows of border states, underscori­ng longstandi­ng conservati­ve complaints of liberal hypocrisy.

President Clinton perfected what is known as the Sister Souljah moment where Democrats dispense with hard left orthodoxie­s and publicly shift to the commonsens­e center where most voters reside. Now liberal outlets like The Washington Post are nudging Biden to follow suit on immigratio­n.

In the same way the administra­tion double-speaks on Israel (Israel needs to “scale back” military operations/Israel needs to “defeat Hamas”), the Biden “reset” tries to have it both ways on immigratio­n: Blame Trump and the GOP for blocking Sen. James Lankford’s “bipartisan” legislatio­n while cherry-picking a few of its components into an executive order that only partially closes the border.

But that dog won’t hunt. One Republican senator doesn’t make a bill “bipartisan” and the Lankford proposal would still allow well over 2 million illegal crossings each year — nearly 5 times that of the Obama and Trump annual levels. The public wants more serious action and President Biden, with legal guidance from the Justice Department, has ample power to shutter the border.

When President Clinton tacked to the center, his very smart White House staff knew the progressiv­e left was a paper tiger — a small sliver of the electorate (about 6% of voters according to Pew), with a short memory, and unlikely to sit out any election. He knew elections were won more on persuasion of the center than turnout of the ideologues on the party’s left flank.

The president faces an uphill battle for re-election. Fewer than one in five voters believe his policies have benefitted them — a shocking number after all of the government spending and handouts which have run up over $2 trillion in annual deficits. Most voters doubt his capacity for a second term. He does not have many options to change this equation. A bold and unmistakab­le shift to the center on immigratio­n is an obvious way he can start to claw back — if only he can show the moxie to do it.

 ?? ?? Undocument­ed migrants crowded at the US-Mexico border in Arizona last August, a sign of the White House failure on this crucial issue.
Undocument­ed migrants crowded at the US-Mexico border in Arizona last August, a sign of the White House failure on this crucial issue.
 ?? ?? President Biden failed to articulate a comprehens­ive migrant strategy at last week’s State of the Union address.
President Biden failed to articulate a comprehens­ive migrant strategy at last week’s State of the Union address.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States