6/26/2019
- Byron York Townhall.com
Congress is debating emergency humanitarian aid to care for
migrants on the U.S.-Mexico border. The need is obvious. With virtually no
barrier to stop them, thousands of migrants are crossing illegally into the
United States every day. More than a million will come this year. U.S. law
prevents border officials from quickly returning them. While they are being
processed, some of the migrants, including children, are being kept temporarily
in terrible conditions. American officials have an obligation to take care of
them before those with no valid claim to be in the United States are returned
to their home countries.
Capitol Hill Democrats are reportedly torn about an
emergency aid measure. On one hand, they want to care for the migrants. On the
other hand, they fear approving aid would empower President Trump to carry out
a plan to deport illegal immigrants whose cases have received full legal due
process and who have been ordered deported. Such deportations used to be
relatively uncontroversial but are now, apparently, unacceptable to some
Democrats.
This moment might be a time for introspection for those who
have consistently downplayed the urgency of the situation on the border.
Earlier this year, with the number of illegal crossings rising; with the nature
of the crossers changing -- more families and more children than in earlier
years; with the testimony of border officials that they were unable to handle the
situation -- with all that happening, many Democrats and their supporters in
the media forcefully denied that there was a crisis on the southern border.
Here are a few -- actually, more than a few -- examples:
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the situation "a fake
crisis at the border."
Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer called it "a
crisis that does not exist."
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said, "There is no
crisis at the border."
House Democratic Caucus Chairman Hakeem Jeffries said,
"There is no crisis at the border."
House Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Eliot Engel
called the situation "a fake crisis at the border."
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler said,
"There is no crisis at the border."
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, former chair of the
Democratic National Committee, said, "We don't have a border crisis."
Rep. Lloyd Doggett called the situation "a phony border
crisis."
Rep. Earl Blumenauer called it "a fake crisis at the
border."
Rep. Sanford Bishop called it "a crisis that does not
exist."
Reps. Jesus Garcia, Jose Serrano, Suzanne Bonamici, Donald
Beyer, Pramila Jayapal and Adriano Espaillat called it a "nonexistent
border crisis."
Former congressman and current California Attorney General
Xavier Becerra said, "There is no border crisis."
All are in public office and all have a say in determining
policy. In the media, NeverTrump Republicans, former Republicans and other
commentators have joined in.
Former Rep. Joe Scarborough, now with MSNBC, called the
situation "an imaginary border crisis."
Former Bush White House official Nicolle Wallace, also with
MSNBC, said, "There's not a crisis."
Former Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol called the
situation "a fake crisis."
GOP strategist Rick Wilson said, "There is no crisis on
the border."
Former conservative talk radio host Charlie Sykes said,
"There is no crisis at the border."
The Washington Post's Max Boot called the situation a
"faux crisis."
The Post's Jennifer Rubin said, "There is no crisis at
the southern border."
The Post's editorial board called it a "make-believe
crisis."
And finally, lest anyone ignore the late-night Resistance,
comedian Jimmy Kimmel called the situation "a fake border crisis."
Are 26 examples enough? There are plenty more, for those who
care to look. The situation at the border is so terrible in part because those
in power, and those cheering them on in the media, have steadfastly resisted
common-sense measures to reduce the flow of illegal migrants -- the large
majority of whom do not have a valid claim of asylum -- across the border. The
resulting paralysis in border policy encourages more migrants to come, making
the situation worse by the day. Perhaps some of those quoted above only want to
deny the president a victory, no matter how sensible. Perhaps others are simply
looking for a partisan advantage. Perhaps some sincerely believe in open, or
virtually open, borders. It does not matter what their motives are. The crisis
-- yes, crisis -- at the border worsens every day they do not act. Byron York is chief political
correspondent for The Washington Examiner.
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