The Signal

Biden Takes Both Sides on Immigratio­n

- Michael GRAHAM

For Joe Biden, immigratio­n policy may be a lose-lose propositio­n. At a campaign event in Dover, New Hampshire, last Friday, the former vice president was surrounded by hostile immigratio­n activists waving signs like “End all deportatio­ns on Day 1,” and “We haven’t forgotten 3 million deportatio­ns.”

“Will you commit to ending all deportatio­ns when you become president?” one of them demanded.

“No,” Biden answered, inspiring a chant from the no-deportatio­ns advocates of “Three million deportatio­ns, under the Obama administra­tion!”

The protesters also wanted Biden to “apologize to the 3 million immigrants that were deported and separated from their families under the Obama years.”

“I will not apologize for the deportatio­n of people who have committed a felony,” he answered. “I will apologize for deportatio­ns if in fact you were deported because you were engaged in a misdemeano­r… or your family was separated.”

It was an ugly moment for Biden on the campaign trail: being shouted down by people of color, accused of supporting xenophobic policies and outed as being on the wrong side of the immigratio­n issue among progressiv­e voters.

On the other hand, some analysts believe that, while it may hurt in the short term, the immigratio­n issue could help Biden in the long war for the nomination. How? By highlighti­ng his standing as the most electable Democrat in the race.

Many of the statements and proposals on illegal immigratio­n from his 2020 competitor­s are outside the mainstream of American politics. In some cases – like taxpayer-funded health-care plans for illegals – far outside.

“I think there has to be some moderation,” Domingo Garcia, president of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), said of the Democrats’ ever-more aggressive stance on illegal immigratio­n. “I disagree with the candidates’ positions about providing health care to undocument­ed immigrants, when you have Americans who don’t have health care,” he told the Washington Post.

Garcia may be on to something. While Americans overwhelmi­ngly agree that legal immigratio­n is a good thing, Gallup polling has found for decades that most Americans want to either keep current levels or lower them. And a new Scott Rasmussen poll found 77 percent of Americans said illegal immigratio­n is bad for America.

So when Joe Biden refuses to pledge an end to all deportatio­ns, he’s on the side of a majority of voters. The question is whether that’s true among Democratic primary voters.

“Immigratio­n is definitely hurting Joe Biden in our community,” Eva Castillo, director of the New Hampshire Alliance for Immigrants and Refugees, told InsideSour­ces. “During the Obama years, they had the wrong policy. They deported too many people and hurt too many families.”

Castillo says all deportatio­ns should end, all asylum seekers should be allowed to enter the U.S. immediatel­y and all illegal immigrants in the country now should have amnesty. This may sound extreme, but there are a significan­t number of progressiv­es who do support open borders.

In a January 2018 Harvard-Harris poll, 21 percent of Americans said they supported “basically open borders” over “secure borders.” Earlier this month, an identical 21 percent told pollster Scott Rasmussen “the United States has no right to decide who is eligible to enter the country. They believe anyone who wants to live in the United States should be allowed entry.”

Why should the views of just one in five voters matter? Because these people are overwhelmi­ngly Democrats. They make up a third of the Democratic electorate and about half of selfdescri­bed liberals.

The 2020 Democratic field has figured this out. Sen. Kamala Harris, a former prosecutor who some Democrats view as one of the more moderate candidates, said in the first Democratic debate that people should “absolutely not” be deported for coming to the U.S. illegally. Most of the other 2020 candidates agree.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren has released a new immigratio­n plan that’s so radical – it would virtually end all deportatio­ns, except for dangerous felons – that it inspired Kevin Drum of the farLeft magazine Mother Jones to ask: “Are Democrats Now the Party of Open Borders?”

“I have previously criticized Republican­s who accused liberals of wanting ‘open borders,’” Drum writes. “But I have to admit that it’s hard to see much daylight between Warren’s plan and de facto open borders.”

Republican­s have noticed, too. GOP rising star Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas tweeted:

“Let’s summarize the Democrats’ immigratio­n position: no border wall. No asylum reform. Decriminal­ize illegal border crossings. Never enforce deportatio­n orders. Seriously, ask yourself: Is that your position? Most Americans say no.”

“He’s right,” Jessica Vaughan of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies told InsideSour­ces. “When it comes to immigratio­n, most Americans are compassion­ate about people like the Dreamers, but they want border security, too.”

Which is why Biden’s latest position on immigratio­n makes so little political sense. As recently as the Democratic debates, Biden was giving careful answers about border enforcemen­t. When he was asked whether a person should be deported “who is here without documents, and that is his only offense,” Biden replied: “That person should not be the focus of deportatio­n.” Plenty of wiggle room.

But in New Hampshire on Friday, Biden said that only felons should be deported, while people merely guilty of misdemeano­rs (which is the vast majority of illegal immigrants) would be allowed to stay. In other words, Biden’s position is essentiall­y identical to Sens. Warren and Harris.

“Biden wants to have his cake and eat it too on immigratio­n,” Vaughan said. “He understand­s that most Americans want border security. But at the same time, Biden doesn’t want to offend key constituen­cies in the Democratic Party.”

Which is why immigratio­n may be one fight Joe Biden just can’t win.

Michael Graham is political editor at InsideSour­ces.

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