San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)
Biden tackles immigration — from both sides
After some initial stumbles, the Biden administration may be finding its sweet spot on immigration.
To get there, President Joe Biden must do the following:
• Undo the harm done by former President Donald Trump, who thought America should have the same restrictive admittance protocol as his country clubs.
• Tell the truth about what can be done and what can’t.
• Stop oversimplifying an issue that is as complicated as they come.
• Resist talking out of both sides of his mouth.
With immigration, the president is an expert at double talk.
At a rally in Georgia in April, Biden was interrupted by protesters demanding that he “abolish ICE.” Immigration and Customs Enforcement is tasked with arresting and deporting undocumented immigrants.
“I agree with you,” Biden told the activists. “I’m working on it, man.”
Biden sure didn’t overexert himself. The administration’s first proposed budget includes nearly $8 billion in funding for ICE during the coming fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. That’s more than Congress authorized for the current fiscal year.
“President Biden’s proposed DHS budget … fails to make a sharp enough break from the Trump administration’s wasteful and harmful spending on the detention and deportation machine,” Naureen Shah, lawyer at the American Civil Liberties Union, told the Washington Post.
No surprise. Biden and members of his administration often tap into their inner Trump. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has pledged to finish building what Trump pitched as a “big beautiful wall” on the border by patching some of the gaps left behind by the last administration. Biden declared the Trump administration’s annual cap of 15,000 refugees just dandy and worth keeping before promising to boost it to 62,500 under pressure from progressives. And the administration housed refugee kids from Central America, locked up in cages and glass holding pens, before transferring custody of them from the Department of Homeland Security to the Department of Health and Human Services.
All those things probably went over well with the white workingclass voters in the Rust Belt states who backed Trump in 2016 but supported Biden in 2020 because they got tired of a freak-show presidency. These voters likely feel as if they have enough competition for jobs from fellow Americans. The last thing they want are foreign workers added to the mix.
It’s convenient for the liberal media to blame Republicans for Congress’ unwillingness to tackle the immigration issue. The truth is, Democrats deserve more than 50 percent of the blame for why lawmakers can’t seem to solve the immigration impasse.
Over the last 30 years, I’ve seen immigration reform efforts in Congress get torpedoed — albeit often quietly, discreetly and secretly — by Democrats who fall into three camps:
• Those in competitive districts who are scared to lose their seats due to the perception that they’re soft on immigration.
• Those beholden to organized labor, whose rank and file often tend to prefer border walls and the mass deportations of anyone who gets past them.
• Those who represent overwhelmingly white states (North Dakota, Iowa, Wyoming) where people have never seen firsthand how immigrants benefit the social and economic fabric of a state.
It’s not hard to find states that have flourished thanks to immigration. Texas and Arizona are booming because of Mexican immigrants. California is home to more immigrants than any other state; if it were a country, its economy would be the fifthlargest in the world.
Yet here’s a twist. Even as Biden is holding the line against illegal immigration, the administration also seems to be taking steps to make it easier, cheaper and quicker for people to come here legally. The plan is to rebuild the legal immigration system to get more people in through the front door. Reforms would include increasing the number of visas for highly skilled workers, cutting or waiving application fees, simplifying forms so they can be completed online, slashing red tape and making it easier for people to obtain work visas or reunite with family members in the United States.
All good things. Legal immigration keeps America young, vibrant, optimistic and competitive. It’s not the problem. It’s part of the solution.
Still, there is only so much money to go around. Get ready for a tug of war over budget priorities: Visa dollars vs. enforcement dollars.
The outcome will tell us everything we need to know about what the Biden administration really cares about, what it stands for and whether it understands the true value of immigration.