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Biden border restrictions bring sharp drop in illegal crossings

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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The number of migrants crossing the U.S. southern border illegally has dropped more than 40 percent in the three weeks since President Biden announced broad restrictions on asylum claims, administration officials said Wednesday.

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U.S. agents have taken fewer than 2,400 migrants into custody per day over the past week, down from more than 3,800 at the beginning of June, according to the latest Department of Homeland Security data. That is the lowest level of illegal crossings since Biden took office, DHS said.

The shift was evident Tuesday in the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas, which has been one of the border’s busiest migration corridors for the past decade. Along areas of the border where migrant families have crossed in large groups to surrender to U.S. authorities and seek protection, Border Patrol agents pursued a handful of adult men trying to evade capture. Agents’ radios were mostly quiet.



The Tucson area in the Arizona desert saw a similar decline in unlawful crossings, DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said during a news conference in that border city Wednesday.
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“The president’s actions are working because of their tough response to illegal crossings,” Mayorkas said. “We are attacking the smuggling organizations that prey on the vulnerable even as the smugglers try to undermine our actions.”
It is not unusual for agents to see a short-lived decline in crossings whenever the government announces a major crackdown. Illegal entries soared to record levels late last year but have been trending downward over the past several months, in part due to more aggressive enforcement by the Mexican government.

Biden administration officials released the border data on the eve of the first debate of 2024 scheduled Thursday between the president, a Democrat, and the presumptive Republican nominee, former president Donald Trump.


Biden administration officials hope the falling numbers of migrants can blunt Republican criticism of the president’s border record. Polls consistently show high rates of disapproval with Biden’s handling of border security and immigration issues. The president has criticized Republicans for opposing a bipartisan bill that would have increased enforcement, leaving him to act on his own.
Homeland Security officials cautioned the results of the crackdown were preliminary, and cast the measures as an attempt to balance tougher enforcement with more generous opportunities for migrants to reach the United States legally.

Biden has “carried out the largest expansion of lawful pathways and orderly processes in decades,” according to a DHS fact sheet on the latest data, measures that are “freeing up the asylum system for those with legitimate claims.”


Republican lawmakers have urged Trump in recent days to target Biden’s immigration record, and have focused on migrants who commit crimes. Most migrants taken into custody at the southern border do not have criminal records, Customs and Border Protection data show.
“I hope President Trump confronts President Biden with this dangerous result of his open border policies at Thursday’s debate,” Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.) said on X Wednesday.

The American Civil Liberties Union and immigrant advocacy groups are suing to block Biden’s asylum restrictions, saying they are endangering people seeking protection.
The United Nations refugee agency has said it is also “profoundly concerned” that the new measures may deny access to asylum for people who are eligible for it.


U.S. immigration laws allow anyone who reaches U.S. soil to seek humanitarian protection if they have a well-founded fear of persecution in their home country. The emergency measures Biden announced June 4 suspend access to those protections on an emergency basis, arguing the U.S. immigration system is too overwhelmed by illegal crossings and insufficient resources.



Biden’s measures call for the asylum restrictions to lift if illegal crossings average fewer than 1,500 per day. They would return if the levels once more surpass 2,500 daily.
Lower number of illegal crossings have allowed U.S. agents to better safeguard the border and increase patrols, the department said, “enhancing DHS efforts to interdict individuals who pose a threat to public safety.”
The DHS statement echoed the administration’s calls for lawmakers to boost funding for the U.S. immigration system, including a major expansion of detention and deportation operations.
DHS said the number of migrants who are allowed into the United States with a pending court date after crossing illegally — the practice derided as “catch and release” — has dropped 65 percent under Biden’s measures. Deportations and returns to Mexico have doubled over the past three weeks, the department said.
 
I wonder why Biden didn't do this sooner.

I wonder why Biden chose to reverse Trump's border policies during Biden's first week in office.

Now we have a few extra million illegals having to be adjudicated, and cared for, probably for years.
Shame the GOP caused the delay by reneging on the legislation they negotiated on.

They definitely should be punished at the ballot box.
 
Shame the GOP caused the delay by reneging on the legislation they negotiated on.
That has nothing to do with Biden's decision to rescind, and then re-implement, restrictions.


White House opened it up, pretended for years it wasn't an issue, finally acknowledged it was, and reversed policy.

They definitely should be punished at the ballot box.
Yup.
 
It's Congress' responsibility.

He negotiated in good faith and GOP cogressional leadership reneged under orders from Trump.
It wasn’t congress who took 13 executive actions on the border in his first hundred days. It was Biden. Who then amazingly said for three years “There’s no crisis at the border and there’s nothing I can do about it anyway.” And then did something and immediately took credit for doing something.
 
Those of low intellect have a propensity to deflect.
We have already demonstrated this week your junior-high level debate skills that consist of merely lobbing lazy, irrelevant questions and never supporting a position with evidence.

There is a reason 90% or more of this board views you as the village idiot. At least that dull-normal PepsiCock knows to tuck tail and STFU when he's embarassed. You come back for more like the creepy masochist you are.

Own it.
 
We have already demonstrated this week your junior-high level debate skills that consist of merely lobbing lazy, irrelevant questions and never supporting a position with evidence.

There is a reason 90% or more of this board views you as the village idiot. At least that dull-normal PepsiCock knows to tuck tail and STFU when he's embarassed. You come back for more like the creepy masochist you are.

Own it.
120% of stats are bullshit.
 
Run a poll and see what the percentage of GIAOTers is that think Northern is the village idiot.

I'll bet you a 12 pack of your favorite craft beer it tops out at more than 85%
Before I vote I need to know who the other choices are. 🤔
 
Like saying “violent crime went down” after legalizing murder.
Confused Threes Company GIF by MOODMAN
 
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What a load of 💩. It did make me laugh and SMH.
Feel free to educate yourself. In his OWN WORDS that is what he was doing:

Former administrations prioritized removal of immigrants convicted of serious crimes, those who threatened national security, and recent border entrants. A 2019 analysis from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University on Trump-era enforcement found that “despite rising numbers of individuals detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), fewer and fewer individuals who have committed and been convicted of serious crimes are among them.” The Trump administration’s enforcement priorities were so broad that they effectively set no priorities at all.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


In order to fund the wall without consent from Congress, Trump issued Proclamation 9844, “Declaring a National Emergency Concerning the Southern Border of the United States.” CMS raised questions about the need for a wall and the national security rationale for declaring an emergency. It found that the multiyear decline in US undocumented population had been driven by Mexican nationals returning to Mexico, and since 2010, about two-thirds of new arrivals into the US undocumented population had overstayed temporary visas, a practice the wall would do nothing to stop.

Border communities and environmentalists have called on Biden to take steps to remediate environmental and cultural destruction caused by construction of the wall. Hundreds of miles of borderlands, including sacred Native American sites and protected public lands, have been bulldozed, blasted, and parched over the past four years due to construction of the wall, with little environmental assessment or oversight. In April 2021, DHS announced plans for initial steps to correct the damage caused by wall construction. The agency will fix holes in the Rio Grande Valley Flood Barrier System and soil erosion over a 14-mile stretch of border wall in San Diego, California.

“Like every nation, the United States has a right and a duty to secure its borders and protect its people against threats,” Biden wrote in the proclamation. “But building a massive wall that spans the entire southern border is not a serious policy solution.”


 
Congress has passed immigration laws over the years. Joe chose not to enforce them. There are laws. Congress isn't to blame.
Wrong and wrong.

On January 20, 2021, President Biden endorsed the US Citizenship Act of 2021 memorializing his commitment to modernize the US immigration system. On February 18, 2021, Senator Bob Menendez and Congresswoman Linda Sanchez introduced the bill. If passed by Congress, the bill would represent the most sweeping immigration reform package since 1990 and would create the largest legalization program in US history, including the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. In particular, the Act would:

  • Provide an eight-year pathway to citizenship for approximately 11 million undocumented immigrants. Undocumented persons physically present in the United States on or before January 1, 2021 would be able to apply for temporary Lawful Prospective Immigrant (LPI) status immediately and permanent residence after five years. Immigrants who engaged in essential critical labor or services during the COVID-19 public health emergency, H-2A non-immigrants (temporary agricultural workers), and Temporary Protected Status (TPS) recipients would also be eligible for LPI status.
  • Reduce the residence requirement for naturalization from 5 years to 3 years for all lawful permanent residents.
  • Make noncitizens who entered the United States as children, including and DACA recipients, eligible for lawful permanent residence (LPR).
  • Make nationals of countries designated for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) or Deferred Enforcement Departure (DED) who have been continuously physically present in the United States since January 1, 2017 and were eligible for TPS or DED on that date, eligible for permanent residence.
  • Make workers who performed agricultural labor or services for at least 2,300 hours or 400 workdays, including seasonal or temporary work, for a five-year period immediately preceding the date they file their adjustment of status application, eligible for LPR status.
  • Eliminate bars that prohibit immigrants from returning to the United States for three years or 10 years if they lived without status in the United States for more than 180 days but less than one year or over one year, respectively.
  • Change the word “alien” to “noncitizen” in all immigration laws in an effort to recognize the United States as a nation of immigrants.
  • Reform family- and employment-based immigration by recapturing millions of previously unused visas to reduce green card backlogs and by eliminating per-country visa caps.
  • Expand eligibility for V visas, which allow certain immigrants to join their petitioning family members in the United States while they wait for their green cards to become available.
  • Provide immigration relief for permanent LGBTQ couples that cannot get married in their jurisdictions. Permanent partners would be considered equal to a married couple. Children of immigrant permanent partners would also be eligible for immigration relief.
  • Eliminate the one-year deadline for filing asylum applications in the United States and provide funding to reduce asylum application backlogs.
  • Expand refugee and asylum processing in the Western Hemisphere and provide resources to support and strengthen processing and resettlement capacity.
  • Establish the Central American Refugee Program, which would allow nationals of El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, or any other Central American country designated by the Secretary of State to apply for refugee resettlement.
  • Creates a Special Immigrant Status program for Syrians who worked for the United States government in Syria and for surviving spouses and children of US government employees abroad who worked for 15 years or were killed in the line of duty.
  • Creates the United States Citizenship and Integration Foundation and other immigrant integration initiatives that would promote expansion of citizenship preparation assistance for LPRs and naturalization applicants and provide grants to assist individuals who are eligible for LPI and LPR status.
  • Prohibit discrimination based on religion and limit presidential authority to issue discriminatory travel bans in the future.
  • Supplement existing border resources with technology and infrastructure to expedite screening, enhance the ability to process asylum seekers, and detect narcotics and other contraband.
  • Direct the DHS Secretary to establish programs that provide alternatives to detention.
  • Provide funding for training and continuing education for Border Patrol agents to promote safety and professionalism.
  • Create the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of Professional Responsibility to investigate criminal and administrative misconduct by agents.
  • Seek to reduce immigration court backlogs, expand training for immigration judges, and improve technology for immigration courts.
  • Provide funding for legal orientation programs and counsel for children and vulnerable individuals.
  • Address underlying causes of migration by increasing assistance to El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras, and establishing processing centers throughout Central America for individuals that are eligible for lawful migration to the United States or other partner countries.
  • Reinstate the Central American Minors program, which would grant special immigrant status to certain Central American children who have a parent that is lawfully present in the US.
  • Create a Central American Family Reunification Parole Program to unite families with approved family-based petitions.
  • Increase the number of diversity visas from 55,000 to 80,000 and raise the cap on U visas (victims of certain crimes) from 10,000 to 30,000.
  • Provide dependents of H-1B visa holders (highly skilled workers) with work authorization and prevent their children from aging out of the system and being forced to leave the United States.
  • Provide that foreign graduates of US universities with advanced STEM degrees would not be subject to numerical visa limits.
  • Create a pilot program for regional economic development visas, which authorizes the DHS Secretary to allow admission of 10,000 additional immigrants per year whose employment is essential to economic development strategies of local communities.
  • Require DHS and the Department of Labor (DOL) to establish a commission of labor, employer, and civil rights organizations to make recommendations to improve the employment verification process.
  • Provide immigrant workers who suffer serious labor violations with greater access to U visa relief and protect workers who are victims of workplace retaliation from deportation to allow labor agencies to interview them and investigate their situations.
 
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FFS. If you’ve swallowed all that as gospel I can’t help you.
You can say you disagree with it, but it is absolutely false to imply as you did that Biden's EOs were not enacted in order to undo what he percieved as damage inflicted by the previous administration.

That was the clear and obvious intent, which is what I noted.
 
You can say you disagree with it, but it is absolutely false to imply as you did that Biden's EOs were not enacted in order to undo what he percieved as damage inflicted by the previous administration.

That was the clear and obvious intent, which is what I noted.
And it was a fulfillment of a campaign promise. HELL YEAH THAT’LL SHOW EM. 💩💩💩🤡🤡🤡
 
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We have already demonstrated this week your junior-high level debate skills that consist of merely lobbing lazy, irrelevant questions and never supporting a position with evidence.

There is a reason 90% or more of this board views you as the village idiot. At least that dull-normal PepsiCock knows to tuck tail and STFU when he's embarassed. You come back for more like the creepy masochist you are.

Own it.

Oh Torbee...

Take a deep breath. You're gonna hyperventilate.
 
You can say you disagree with it, but it is absolutely false to imply as you did that Biden's EOs were not enacted in order to undo what he percieved as damage inflicted by the previous administration.

That was the clear and obvious intent, which is what I noted.
Damage to who? It has caused thousands of Chinese nationals and people on the terrorist watch list to flood the country. How is that “undoing damage”? I want my president to worry about damage to America and Americans first, then decide how to help the lawbreakers sneaking in.
 
Damage to who? It has caused thousands of Chinese nationals and people on the terrorist watch list to flood the country. How is that “undoing damage”? I want my president to worry about damage to America and Americans first, then decide how to help the lawbreakers sneaking in.
Feel free to read the reasoning behind the EOs. I put several links and even highlighted some of it.

Again, just because you don't AGREE with the approach does not mean the effort was not intended to address the immigration issue.

Biden has demonstrated repeated efforts to work with Congress on meaningful reform and has been rebuffed time after time after time.
 
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Feel free to read the reasoning behind the EOs. I put several links and even highlighted some of it.

Again, just because you don't AGREE with the approach does not mean the effort was not intended to address the immigration issue.

Biden has demonstrated repeated efforts to work with Congress on meaningful reform and has been rebuffed time after time after time.
And then he went all “Thers no crisis at the border” for three years while insane amounts of people were crossing and getting away. Jeh Johnson said that 1000 people a day was enough to throw everything into chaos. We were at close to 10,000 a day and he was proclaiming “nothing to see here”. For THREE fvcking years. That’s called malfeasance. Any way you slice it. It’s how Trump handled the COVID “hoax” at first.
 
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Feel free to read the reasoning behind the EOs. I put several links and even highlighted some of it.

Again, just because you don't AGREE with the approach does not mean the effort was not intended to address the immigration issue.

Biden has demonstrated repeated efforts to work with Congress on meaningful reform and has been rebuffed time after time after time.
What you are saying is false.



Isn't it kinda weird how willing the dems are to just throw Biden under the bus on getting shit done? As if EVERY other president hasn't had to work across the isle.


Strange times.
 
Wrong and wrong.

On January 20, 2021, President Biden endorsed the US Citizenship Act of 2021 memorializing his commitment to modernize the US immigration system. On February 18, 2021, Senator Bob Menendez and Congresswoman Linda Sanchez introduced the bill. If passed by Congress, the bill would represent the most sweeping immigration reform package since 1990 and would create the largest legalization program in US history, including the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. In particular, the Act would:

  • Provide an eight-year pathway to citizenship for approximately 11 million undocumented immigrants. Undocumented persons physically present in the United States on or before January 1, 2021 would be able to apply for temporary Lawful Prospective Immigrant (LPI) status immediately and permanent residence after five years. Immigrants who engaged in essential critical labor or services during the COVID-19 public health emergency, H-2A non-immigrants (temporary agricultural workers), and Temporary Protected Status (TPS) recipients would also be eligible for LPI status.
  • Reduce the residence requirement for naturalization from 5 years to 3 years for all lawful permanent residents.
  • Make noncitizens who entered the United States as children, including and DACA recipients, eligible for lawful permanent residence (LPR).
  • Make nationals of countries designated for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) or Deferred Enforcement Departure (DED) who have been continuously physically present in the United States since January 1, 2017 and were eligible for TPS or DED on that date, eligible for permanent residence.
  • Make workers who performed agricultural labor or services for at least 2,300 hours or 400 workdays, including seasonal or temporary work, for a five-year period immediately preceding the date they file their adjustment of status application, eligible for LPR status.
  • Eliminate bars that prohibit immigrants from returning to the United States for three years or 10 years if they lived without status in the United States for more than 180 days but less than one year or over one year, respectively.
  • Change the word “alien” to “noncitizen” in all immigration laws in an effort to recognize the United States as a nation of immigrants.
  • Reform family- and employment-based immigration by recapturing millions of previously unused visas to reduce green card backlogs and by eliminating per-country visa caps.
  • Expand eligibility for V visas, which allow certain immigrants to join their petitioning family members in the United States while they wait for their green cards to become available.
  • Provide immigration relief for permanent LGBTQ couples that cannot get married in their jurisdictions. Permanent partners would be considered equal to a married couple. Children of immigrant permanent partners would also be eligible for immigration relief.
  • Eliminate the one-year deadline for filing asylum applications in the United States and provide funding to reduce asylum application backlogs.
  • Expand refugee and asylum processing in the Western Hemisphere and provide resources to support and strengthen processing and resettlement capacity.
  • Establish the Central American Refugee Program, which would allow nationals of El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, or any other Central American country designated by the Secretary of State to apply for refugee resettlement.
  • Creates a Special Immigrant Status program for Syrians who worked for the United States government in Syria and for surviving spouses and children of US government employees abroad who worked for 15 years or were killed in the line of duty.
  • Creates the United States Citizenship and Integration Foundation and other immigrant integration initiatives that would promote expansion of citizenship preparation assistance for LPRs and naturalization applicants and provide grants to assist individuals who are eligible for LPI and LPR status.
  • Prohibit discrimination based on religion and limit presidential authority to issue discriminatory travel bans in the future.
  • Supplement existing border resources with technology and infrastructure to expedite screening, enhance the ability to process asylum seekers, and detect narcotics and other contraband.
  • Direct the DHS Secretary to establish programs that provide alternatives to detention.
  • Provide funding for training and continuing education for Border Patrol agents to promote safety and professionalism.
  • Create the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of Professional Responsibility to investigate criminal and administrative misconduct by agents.
  • Seek to reduce immigration court backlogs, expand training for immigration judges, and improve technology for immigration courts.
  • Provide funding for legal orientation programs and counsel for children and vulnerable individuals.
  • Address underlying causes of migration by increasing assistance to El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras, and establishing processing centers throughout Central America for individuals that are eligible for lawful migration to the United States or other partner countries.
  • Reinstate the Central American Minors program, which would grant special immigrant status to certain Central American children who have a parent that is lawfully present in the US.
  • Create a Central American Family Reunification Parole Program to unite families with approved family-based petitions.
  • Increase the number of diversity visas from 55,000 to 80,000 and raise the cap on U visas (victims of certain crimes) from 10,000 to 30,000.
  • Provide dependents of H-1B visa holders (highly skilled workers) with work authorization and prevent their children from aging out of the system and being forced to leave the United States.
  • Provide that foreign graduates of US universities with advanced STEM degrees would not be subject to numerical visa limits.
  • Create a pilot program for regional economic development visas, which authorizes the DHS Secretary to allow admission of 10,000 additional immigrants per year whose employment is essential to economic development strategies of local communities.
  • Require DHS and the Department of Labor (DOL) to establish a commission of labor, employer, and civil rights organizations to make recommendations to improve the employment verification process.
  • Provide immigrant workers who suffer serious labor violations with greater access to U visa relief and protect workers who are victims of workplace retaliation from deportation to allow labor agencies to interview them and investigate their situations.
I suggest you read Title 8 of the US Code. There are current immigration laws. Biden decided not to enforce them.
 
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