How Biden Ignored Warnings and Lost Americans’ Faith in Immigration

5Mind. The Meme Platform
The New York Times Header

The Democratic president and his top advisers rejected recommendations that could have eased the border crisis that helped return Donald Trump to the White House.

In the weeks after Joseph R. Biden Jr. was elected president, advisers delivered a warning: His approach to immigration could prove disastrous.

Mr. Biden had pledged to treat unauthorized immigrants more humanely than President Donald J. Trump, who generated widespread backlash by separating migrant children from their parents.

But Mr. Biden was now president-elect, and his positions threatened to drastically increase border crossings, experts advising his transition team warned in a Zoom briefing in the final weeks of 2020, according to people with direct knowledge of that briefing. That jump, they said, could provoke a political crisis.

“Chaos” was the word the advisers had used in a memo during the campaign.

They offered a range of options to avert that crisis, by better deterring migrants. Mr. Biden seemed to grasp the risk. But he and his top aides failed to act on those recommendations.

The warnings came true, and then some. After Mr. Biden became president, migrant encounters at the southern border quickly doubled, then kept rising. New arrivals overwhelmed border stations, then border towns, and eventually major cities like New York and Denver.

Anger over illegal migration helped return Mr. Trump to the presidency, and he has enacted even more aggressive policies than those Mr. Biden first campaigned against. Mr. Trump has drawn outrage from Democrats by sending masked agents to target immigrants, often aided by National Guard soldiers.

But a New York Times examination of Mr. Biden’s record found that he and his closest advisers repeatedly rebuffed recommendations that could have addressed the border crisis faster, and eased what became a potent issue for Mr. Trump as he sought to return to the White House and justify the aggressive tactics roiling American cities today.

Former Biden administration officials told The Times that Mr. Biden and his circle of close confidants — including Ron Klain, who was chief of staff during the president’s first two years, Mike Donilon, Jennifer O’Malley Dillon and Anita Dunn — made two crucial errors.

First, they underestimated the scale of migration that was coming. Second, they failed to appreciate the political reaction to that migration — believing that stronger enforcement would alienate Latino and progressive voters, and also that a border surge would not be an important issue to most voters. Those calculations would later prove to be mistaken, with many voters, including Latinos, citing immigration as a reason for supporting Mr. Trump in 2024.

By Christopher Flavelle

Read Full Article

Christopher Flavelle interviewed more than 30 former Biden administration officials who worked on immigration and border policy, as well as members of Congress, state and local officials, lawyers and migrants.

Contact Your Elected Officials
The New York Times
The New York Timeshttps://www.nytimes.com/
The New York Times brings you unparalleled access to the people and events shaping our world today. we tell stories In a range of formats to fit your lifestyle.

US Natural Gas Market Shielded From Global Price Shocks During Iran War

Analysts say East Asia could see hikes in energy costs after an Iranian strike wrecked Qatari LNG infrastructure that met 20 percent of the world’s demand.

Israel Targets Checkpoints That Hold Back Iranian Uprising

For decades, one of the most visible expressions of state power in Iran has not been found in govt. buildings or military bases, but in the streets.

The Limits of Power—and the Power Behind the Regime

Western policymakers assume regimes fall when they lose legitimacy. History shows they collapse when they lose the power—and money—to enforce control.

Momentum Builds for Regime Change in Cuba

Momentum builds for regime change in Cuba as Cuba’s leadership faces increased strain from U.S. policy and mounting protests on the island.
00:01:55

US Has a New Ally in Latin America—Here’s Why It Matters

“We are going to take back our country,” newly minted Chilean President José Antonio Kast told a crowd of thousands as he took office March 11.

FedEx Rolls Out Same-Day Delivery Service

FedEx launched a same-day delivery service as shipping and retail companies compete to meet growing customer expectations for near-instant order fulfillment.

Suspicious Drone Incursion Causes Alarm at US Bomber Base

Suspicious drone activity recently caused alarm at a U.S. military base in Louisiana that hosts long-range strategic bombers.

Stocks Slip, Oil Holds Above $100 as Iran Tensions Cloud Sentiment

U.S. stocks opened lower while oil prices held above $100 a barrel on March 24, as lingering doubts over easing Middle East tensions weighed on sentiment.

FCC Bans Foreign-Made Routers Citing National Security Risks

FCC banned all imports of foreign-made commercial routers March 23, a move that targets Chinese-linked brands found to pose national security risks.

Markwayne Mullin Sworn In as DHS Secretary

Former Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin was sworn in at the White House as the new Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
00:27:39

US Looking to Seize Iranian Defectors’ Money: Bessent

Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent said that the US is moving to seize funds transferred abroad by Iranian defectors, so it can be to returned to the Iranian people.

Trump Says He’s ‘Not Putting Troops Anywhere’ Amid Iran War

President Donald Trump met with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to discuss the Iran war, saying he is not inclined to send U.S. ground troops.

US Agencies Terminated or Reduced 95 Wasteful Contracts Worth $2 Billion: DOGE

Federal agencies canceled or scaled back 95 wasteful contracts worth up to $2B in the last four weeks, saving taxpayers $757M.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central