Author Topic: Now Is The Time For Republicans To Hit Biden Even Harder On The Border... Derek Hunter  (Read 302 times)

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Now Is The Time For Republicans To Hit Biden Even Harder On The Border
Derek Hunter


Joe Biden balked. He had given Texas a deadline to allow border patrol into Shelby Park to remove the razor wire they’d erected to secure the 2.5 miles the park shares with the Mexican border, the only stretch of the border actually secured, and Texas responded with the single-finger salute. Then Biden, knowing how wildly unpopular his decision to invite and encourage the whole world to play Red Rover on the southern border is, decided the optics of his government cutting the only barricade that is working to slow his invasion did nothing. Now is the time for Republicans to hit him even harder on the border.

When your opponent is bloodied and bruised in boxing, staggering around the ring, you don’t let up until the bell rings, the referee stops the fight, or they’re on the canvas. In politics, there is no referee or bell, only a finish line of election day, so you need to pummel your opponent as hard and for as long as you possibly can.

Republicans need to hang the disaster of the border on Biden’s head the way Vince McMahon is alleged to have hung his previous night’s dinner on the head of his former employee – relentlessly, nuts and all.

more
https://townhall.com/columnists/derekhunter/2024/01/28/now-is-the-time-for-republicans-to-hit-biden-even-harder-on-the-border-n2634279
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Greg Abbott Schools the Biden Administration

National Review By Rich Lowry 1/28/2024

He’s the MVP of border hawks.

Texas governor Greg Abbott will never be mistaken for Vladimir I. Lenin, but his role during the border crisis recalls the revolutionary’s famous line about “heightening the contradictions.”

It is, of course, beyond Abbott’s power to secure the border in the teeth of a determined federal policy of nonenforcement. Still, he’s used the instruments available to him to force sanctuary-city mayors to confront the consequences of their own professed beliefs on immigration and to bait the Biden administration into making its perverse priorities at the border unmistakable.

Abbott has done this with relatively small-scale initiatives that have packed a big PR and political punch.

First, as we all know, he’s been busing migrants to sanctuary cities. In the scheme of things, this has been a very minimal operation. Axios reported that, as of October, Texas had bused more than 50,000 migrants to various cities — out of the millions that have entered the country under President Biden.

Texas is touting a higher number, 100,000. Even that number is just a third of the overall Border Patrol encounters in one month alone, the record 300,000 in December.

Despite what you might believe listening to the debate, not all migrants are coming to the United States through Texas. And those migrants who do arrive in Texas aren’t all intending to stay there.

Many of them have friends and family elsewhere, including in places like New York and Chicago that were already major hubs for illegal immigrants prior to this crisis. They would head there even without a ride from Greg Abbott, and, in fact, they do.

The New York Times noted in a report a few months ago that New York City had 100,000 migrants arrive in the last year, only 13,000 of whom had been sent by Abbott.

Many of those who get the free transportation, by the way, consider themselves lucky. As the Times notes:

    Many migrants have been grateful for the free transportation, because they often have little money left by the time they complete a monthslong trek to the U.S.-Mexico border.

    Lever Alejos, a Venezuelan delivered to Washington, D.C., last July, said, ‘I feel fortunate the governor put me on a bus to Washington.’ He has found work and started sending money and gifts to his young son back home. He recently bought a car.

Regardless, by sending a small proportion of migrants where they’d probably go anyway, Abbott has achieved a couple of things.

He’s made it easier for sanctuary-city mayors to complain about the migrants, by making himself the scapegoat. They’d presumably be much more inclined to bite their tongues if they had to point the finger at the president rather than the Texas governor. That the mayors are bemoaning the situation at all adds bipartisan credibility to the idea that this is a crisis, and they obviously undermine the concept of a sanctuary city itself by begging for fewer illegal immigrants to come to their jurisdictions.

The growing confrontation with the federal government over border security features a similar dynamic of a minor action bringing an outsized political benefit. The dispute centers on a 47-acre park in Eagle Pass, Texas. Whether Texas is allowed to string barbed wire along this land or whether the federal government takes it down is not of great moment one way or another in the broader border crisis.

Yet, Abbott has managed to get the federal government in the position of actually removing physical barriers to illegal immigration at the border and insisting that it is imperative that it be permitted to continue doing so. This alone is a PR debacle for the administration, but it comes in a controversy — with its fraught legal and constitutional implications — that will garner massive attention out of proportion to its practical importance.

This is impressive by any measure.

More: https://www.nationalreview.com/2024/01/greg-abbott-schools-the-biden-administration/