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The border crisis is SO obvious even the media have started to notice

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useapen

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Jan 17, 2024, 6:05:59 AMJan 17
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The White House is losing the immigration debate.

There hasn’t been any question that it has deserved to lose this debate
from the beginning.

But for the longest time, there wasn’t much focus on the border, except on
the right.

Now, the negotiations between the White House and congressional
Republicans over a package of immigration provisions and new funding for
Ukraine have put the border at the center of the political discussion, and
the White House is faring poorly.

In an interview on the show “CBS Mornings” the other day, Homeland
Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas sat through what must have been the
roughest handling he’s ever encountered from the mainstream press.

Co-host Tony Dokoupil challenged him on specific policy changes
Republicans are advocating, and when Mayorkas was evasive, told him,
“Republicans want a stop to the flow — with very specific ideas. You’re
not even talking about those ideas this morning.”

This was significant, not because Dokoupli is becoming an immigration
restrictionist, but because a mainstream news anchor — on a morning show,
no less — has absorbed the notion that GOP border hawks have constructive
ideas on immigration worth considering.

When is the last time that happened?

It turns out that when your policy has been to permit 4.5 million new
illegal immigrants and counting to enter the United States, straining
communities around the country, your credibility takes a hit and even
sympathetic people begin to look for alternatives.

The insistence of White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre that
President Biden is either doing everything he can at the border, that he’s
helpless because the immigration system is broken or that [insert some
other excuse here] was always tinny and unconvincing, but now is laughably
implausible given the scale of the unspooling disaster.

She said a couple of weeks ago that the numbers at the border are “not
usual,” even though December was another record for encounters.

When reminded of this at a recent briefing, she denied she said it and
emphasized that there are “ebbs and flows” at the border, raising the
question of when the “ebbs” are going to happen.

A couple of things have turned the tide of the debate, besides the sheer
numbers involved.

One might be called the “Bill Melugin effect,” after the Fox News reporter
who has delivered stunning images from the border day and after day, even
when the rest of the media wasn’t paying attention.

It’s one thing to read a New York Times headline, “ ‘We Are Not Equipped
to Deal with This’: Migrant Surge Overwhelms U.S. Border”; it’s another to
see it happening in real time, and hear directly from the people involved.

The cries for help from Democratic mayors have also validated the idea
that there is indeed a crisis and it comes with real costs.

But, unwilling to stray too far from the party line, the mayors blame
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott for sending migrants their way and plead for more
resources rather than call on the Biden administration to exclude the
illegal immigrants in the first place.

Finally, there’s the growing recognition that the chaos at the border is
hurting Biden, and he needs to do something about it.

“There’s no doubt that there’s been a shift on this partly because of the
influx of these migrants in these big cities,” Democratic strategist David
Axelrod told the Times.

This reality puts the White House in the weaker position in the
negotiations — it is the administration that most needs a change at the
border to stop its political bleeding (and get the Ukraine funding it
wants), while the status quo favors Republicans.

None of this means that the GOP will get what it wants.

To ensure a meaningful change, it needs to limit Biden’s authority to
release people into the country, and the details will matter.

But the party has the upper hand, thanks to a Biden failure at the border
that may, finally, be unsustainable.

Twitter: @Rich Lowry

https://nypost.com/2024/01/05/opinion/the-border-crisis-is-so-obvious-
even-the-media-have-started-to-notice/
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