Times Standard (Eureka)

Biden faces more criticism about the US-Mexico border

One of his biggest problems heading into 2024

- By Will Weissert and Adriana Gomez Licon

MIAMI >> The ad sounds like something out of the GOP 2024 playbook, trumpeting a senator’s work with Republican­s to crack down on the flow of fentanyl and other illegal drugs into the U.S., getting tough on Chinese interests helping smugglers, and noting how he “wrote a bill signed by Donald Trump to increase funding for Border Patrol.”

It’s actually a commercial for Sen. Sherrod Brown, an Ohio Democrat facing a tough reelection fight that will help decide control of the Senate.

“Ohioans trust Sherrod Brown to keep us safe,” says the narrator of the ad, sponsored by the Democrat-aligned Duty and Country PAC. His campaign declined to comment.

The message is one more indication of the political and security challenges the U.S.-Mexico border has presented for President Joe Biden. Some Democrats across the country are distancing themselves from the White House, and polls indicate widespread frustratio­n with Biden’s handling of immigratio­n and the border, creating a major liability for the president’s re-election next year.

The Biden administra­tion this week took two actions seen by many as moving to the right on immigratio­n.

The Department of Homeland Security waived environmen­tal and other reviews to construct new portions of a border wall

in South Texas after Biden pledged during the 2020 campaign that he would build “not another foot” of wall. And U.S. officials said they would resume deportatio­ns to Venezuela not long after the administra­tion increased protected status for thousands of people from the country.

Both moves inflamed conservati­ves and liberals alike. Many Republican­s accused Biden of being too late to adopt former President Donald Trump’s ideas on a border wall, while liberals who oppose additional border restrictio­ns accused the White House of betraying campaign pledges.

“My frustratio­n has been that we are not addressing immigratio­n in a holistic way as a country. We are depending on the president alone,” said Rep. Veronica Escobar of Texas, a Democrat who represents the border city of El Paso and is a national co-chair of the Biden reelection campaign. “We are treating people from different nationalit­ies in

a different way. And the pathways that have been created are being challenged in court consistent­ly.”

Biden has said his administra­tion moved forward with the border wall because it was required by Congress during the Trump administra­tion, even though he considers it ineffectiv­e. His reelection campaign pointed to Trump’s record at the border, including his administra­tion’s practice of separating immigrant families as a deterrence measure and the temporary detention of children in warehouses in chain-link cells.

“MAGA Republican­s are running on the legacy of Donald Trump’s playbook of family separation, caging kids, and shouting ‘border!’ without any serious solutions,” said Kevin Munoz, a spokesman for Biden’s reelection campaign, referring to supporters of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement.

Border crossings hit two-decade highs under Trump but fell during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, with immigratio­n authoritie­s expelling most border crossers using public health authority known as Title 42.

Upon taking office, Biden paused border wall constructi­on and canceled the Trump administra­tion’s “Remain in Mexico “program, but kept expelling many people under Title 42 until this past May.

Still, border crossings are now skyrocketi­ng, which some observers blame on his administra­tion for creating the perception that the border was open. The White House counters that migration has surged across the Western Hemisphere due to regional challenges out of the administra­tion’s control.

Conservati­ve media outlets often spotlight border crossings and blame Biden for creating what they say is a crisis. But Biden has taken criticism from many in his own party, including Democratic mayors and governors who want more help caring for newly arriving migrants.

Republican-led border states started busing thousands of immigrants to Democratic-led cities across the country, creating in many places a huge shortage of space that’s led to makeshift shelters and camps.

In Chicago, O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport is now housing hundreds of migrants from babies to the elderly at a shuttle bus center. They sleep on cardboard pads on the floor and share airport bathrooms.

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande and entered the U.S. from Mexico are lined up for processing by U.S. Customs and Border Protection on Sept. 23in Eagle Pass, Texas.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande and entered the U.S. from Mexico are lined up for processing by U.S. Customs and Border Protection on Sept. 23in Eagle Pass, Texas.

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