Reno Gazette Journal

Texas border czar sees cause for worry

- Lauren Villagran OMAR ORNELAS/EL PASO TIMES

Mike Banks likes to joke that he spent one day in retirement after serving more than two decades in the U.S. Border Patrol. It took only one phone call from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to get him back to border enforcemen­t – this time, for the state.

Abbott is testing the limits of what states can do to control immigratio­n. As Texas’ pioneering first “border czar,” Banks is advising the governor’s evolving – and controvers­ial – security strategy even as the Biden administra­tion fights the state’s tactics in federal court.

The election season stakes were on display earlier this spring when a bipartisan border security bill – endorsed by the White House – failed despite broad voter support. Republican­s backed off after Donald Trump publicly blasted it.

In a mobile command vehicle parked near the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Banks spoke to USA TODAY.

This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

USA TODAY: Polls have shown that voters across the country, even outside of border states, are ranking immigratio­n border security as a top issue. Should they be worried?

Mike Banks: Every state has really become a border state. Never in my career have I seen such large numbers entering the country illegally. And so I think we should be worried about it.

First and foremost, we need to separate immigratio­n from border security.

What you have right now is the cartels weaponizin­g immigratio­n against the forces on the border, whether it be Border Patrol, the state of Texas, any other law enforcemen­t. They’re weaponizin­g the migrants, holding them back, pushing them across at certain times in order to overwhelm the system.

That now leaves miles and miles of border wide open where they can push through the gotaways, they can push through the hard narcotics, they can push through the high-value targets. So I think it’s way beyond time for America to be concerned about our border being as wide open as it is.

What do you mean when you say we need to “separate immigratio­n from border security”?

It’s far past time for the U.S government to come up with comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform. Immigratio­n reform isn’t “let’s create a crisis at the border, and then you’ll just give me whatever I want.” The left and the right need to sit down and come up with a viable immigratio­n system that works for today’s migrants, for what we need in this country for workforce, for what we need for population (growth), for what we need in getting experts into this country.

What we can’t do is have open borders in between the ports of entry where anyone can come through. And the federal government is inviting this to continue happening.

Texas is building its own border infrastruc­ture, from concertina wire to a “forward operating base” here in Eagle Pass. What does the border look like five years from now?

You need the right combinatio­n of technology, infrastruc­ture, personnel and consequenc­es. That’s what we’re trying to put together as a total package in the state of Texas. We are building state border wall at the exact same specificat­ions that the previous (Trump) administra­tion was building border wall. Does border wall stop everything? No. It’s like a lock on anything else. It keeps honest people honest. And it works as a force multiplier. You can control the area with less manpower.

I would say that over the next five years ... we’re going to continue building tactical infrastruc­ture. We’re going to continue building border wall. Right now, our current pace is about 1 mile a week. We’re going to put up things like the border buoy barriers, with the understand­ing that you don’t need a wall from sea to shining sea.

If you look at the numbers ... you will see that while Texas owns almost 64% of the entire land mass with Mexico, 1,254 miles, we now account for less than 30% of all the cross-border traffic. (Editor’s note: U.S. Customs and Border Protection data show 44% of illegal crossings occurred in Texas in fiscal year 2024 through March.) To me, what that shows is that deterrence does work, that you can deter people from crossing illegally. Right now they’re going to the path of least resistance. And the path of least resistance for illegal immigratio­n is California, Arizona, New Mexico.

Do you have any contact with counterpar­ts in Mexico?

We do. We don’t communicat­e at the same level as I did when I was in the Border Patrol, at the federal level. But on the state level, we communicat­e. There’s communicat­ions from governor to governor. There’s communicat­ions from the different state police agencies with our police agencies, with Guardia Nacional and our National Guard. We communicat­e with Mexico daily, if not multiple times a day.

Is Mexico doing enough to slow the flow of migrants?

Many (Mexican) states along the border ... are feeling much the same way Texas is, where the states are being overrun with illegal immigratio­n and being left to fend for themselves ... without the proper assistance from the federal government. So they’re stepping up on the south side in these Mexican states and doing what they can to deter illegal immigratio­n, as well.

Is the federal government of Mexico doing enough? No. Is the federal government United States doing enough? No.

 ?? ?? Mike Banks, the first Texas “border czar,” navigates the Rio Grande at Eagle Pass. Banks is alarmed over the volume of illegal immigratio­n.
Mike Banks, the first Texas “border czar,” navigates the Rio Grande at Eagle Pass. Banks is alarmed over the volume of illegal immigratio­n.
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