Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mayors, direct ire at D.C.

- CYNTHIA M. ALLEN

Chicago became the latest northern city to feel a little of the Texas heat last week. Two busloads of migrants, containing roughly 75 people, reached the streets of the Windy City on Wednesday.

Chicago joined Washington, D.C., and New York City as a third destinatio­n now offered to migrants picked up along Texas’ southern border — part of Gov. Greg Abbott’s political strategy for dealing with the massive increase in illegal border crossings.

Abbott’s migrant busing strategy, which sends willing migrants to northern “sanctuary cities,” has been the source of much consternat­ion.

Some conservati­ves even have expressed the “ickiness” of so brazen a political troll, especially one in which the lives and sufferings of real people are in play.

Political stunts involving vulnerable people are seldom a good look, even for a governor who has unfairly found his state at the mercy of an absentee federal government and decades of failed immigratio­n policy.

But Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot claimed the border crisis was “manufactur­ed” by Abbott, a fiction asserted by New York Mayor Eric Adams as well.

She continued her specious claims, calling Abbott’s actions amoral.

Lightfoot knows that this crisis is by no means manufactur­ed.

There is no question that the crush of humanity crossing America’s southern border has been at crisis levels for years.

Lightfoot’s city is caring for only 75 migrants, not 750 a day for months on end.

The migrant crisis has forced Texas, for better or worse, to take matters — which are the sole responsibi­lity of the federal government — into its own hands.

Unfortunat­ely, it’s hard to know if Operation Lone Star, Abbott’s $4 billion immigratio­n enforcemen­t strategy, is having any impact.

To the extent that this crisis was manufactur­ed, that credit goes to the Biden administra­tion, which instead of seeking to deter illegal migrants and secure the southern border, has demonized Border Patrol agents and offered migrants de facto amnesty.

That has undoubtedl­y incentiviz­ed more people to make the harrowing journey.

Where’s the morality in that?

Yet Lightfoot seems to equate “a more than 12-hour journey across a country that they don’t know” on a charter bus commission­ed by the state to the journey of several months on foot, through jungles and across rivers, often led by unscrupulo­us human smugglers. Again, her comparison­s are off.

Morality is a relative concept for progressiv­e leaders like Lightfoot and Adams, who accuse Abbott of inhumanity yet ignore how their political party’s immigratio­n policy failings have created a permanent underclass of U.S. residents forever destined to live in the shadows.

Illegal immigratio­n may be appealing when jobs are plentiful, but when the labor market is tight, a glut of cheap labor can reduce real wages for low-wage workers, legal immigrants and undocument­ed workers alike.

And undocument­ed persons, because of their reticence to seek help from law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, are more vulnerable to all manner of criminal elements.

There is nothing moral about creating an environmen­t in which such misery — even if it is safely inside the U.S. border — can flourish.

Abbott’s move may be too cute by half, but the Texas governor is not the villain here.

And mayors like Lightfoot and Adams would do better directing their ire and indignatio­n not at Texas, but at Washington.

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