The Biden administration doesn’t lack the willpower to “secure” the border, as David J. Bier of the libertarian Cato Institute noted. “The reason people are being released is because of operational capacity to detain and deport them, not policy.” Biden’s administration “removed a higher percentage of border crossers in his first two years than Trump did during his last two years, (51 percent versus 47 percent), despite Trump having to deal with many fewer total crossings,” in part by making deportation agreements with the governments of Mexico, Cuba, and Venezuela, according to Bier — but many more migrants are trying to cross into the United States without sufficient legal avenues to do so.
Biden is seeking additional resources from Congress to build the operational capacity needed to secure the border. He asked Congress in October for $13.6 billion to “pay for more border patrol officers, immigration judges, shelters and detention centers” as part of a broader supplemental funding request that included military aid to Ukraine and Israel. But Republicans refused to take up the legislation in the House and blocked it in the Senate, demanding border policy changes as their price for supporting the funds.
Biden then supported ongoing bipartisan Senate negotiations over potential immigration policy changes, which reportedly neared a final deal earlier this week. His willingness to accept a deal has drawn fire from the left, as advocates and some congressional Democrats criticize the proposal for dropping progressive priorities like a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who have lived in the country for decades while making major concessions on Republican demands like limiting the president’s ability to offer parole to people fleeing humanitarian crises.
You would think, given the cataclysmic terms in which Republicans and right-wing media talk about the border, that they would be eager to pass legislation intended to tighten its security. But you’d be wrong — Trump and Republican leaders in Congress are all trying to scuttle any potential deal because Trump wants chaos at the border so he can run on his purported ability to stop it.
Trump spoke out against any deal that isn’t “PERFECT” in a post last week on Truth Social. “I do not think we should do a Border Deal, at all, unless we get EVERYTHING needed to shut down the INVASION of Millions & Millions of people, many from parts unknown, into our once great, but soon to be great again, Country!”
Embattled House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) likewise says he opposes bipartisan border legislation that doesn’t include everything House Republicans want. Last week, he told Fox’s Laura Ingraham that he’s been speaking “pretty frequently” with Trump about the possible deal. He offered the admission after Ingraham said that she had just spoken to Trump, who told her “he had spoken to you about this deal and that he is against it, and he urged you to be against this deal.” She added that the former president was “extremely adamant about that.”
Trump has also been reaching out to Republican senators in an effort to get them to “kill” the deal, HuffPost reported Wednesday. “Trump wants them to kill it because he doesn’t want Biden to have a victory,” HuffPost’s source told them. “He told them he will fix the border when he is president… He said he only wants the perfect deal.”
Trump’s effort appears to have succeeded, according to statements Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) reportedly made to Senate Republicans at a Wednesday meeting. PunchBowl News reported: