The New York Times: Biden dares Trump to ‘join me’ in tightening U.S.-Mexico Border
President Joe Biden issued a political dare to his biggest rival, former President Donald Trump, as the men took duelling trips to the southern border in Texas on Thursday in an effort to leverage a dominant issue of the 2024 presidential campaign.
In remarks delivered some 300 miles away, Trump highlighted crimes committed by migrants in an attempt to portray Biden as a president plunging the nation into crime and disorder.
Biden, by contrast, focused on compromise, but he also baited his rival, citing a bipartisan immigration bill that fell apart in the Senate at Trump’s urging.
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By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.“Instead of telling members of Congress to block this legislation, join me,” Biden said of the bill that had been a breakthrough after years of paralysis on one of the nation’s most intractable issues.
Biden’s push to collaborate on what he called the “toughest” border legislation in decades shows how the Democratic Party has shifted to the right on this issue.
Biden arrived on Air Force One in Brownsville, Texas, a city in the Rio Grande Valley that has historically seen large influxes of migrants, and met with Border Patrol, law enforcement and asylum officers. He said it was “long past time” to fix the border and immigration system, and that message from Border Patrol agents and others involved in security was plain: They wanted more officers, more judges and more resources.
Biden also denounced Republicans for thwarting the bipartisan immigration bill — one that he championed and they themselves had demanded — that would have resulted in a crackdown at the border.
Trump spoke in Eagle Pass, which has become a common backdrop for politicians who want to show they are tough on immigration. He was met there by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Brandon Judd, the president of the National Border Patrol Council, the main union for Border Patrol agents, and began his remarks by commending Abbott on his efforts on the border. “The United States is being overrun,” Trump said, as he criticized Biden’s border policies and “what he has done to our country.”
Trump also focused on the death of Laken Riley, a 22-year-old nursing student in Georgia, blaming it on Biden. The man charged with killing her is an immigrant from Venezuela who crossed the border illegally, and her death has become a political flashpoint.
Record numbers of migrants have crossed into the United States during the Biden administration, a surge that Trump and other Republicans have used to attack the president as weak on the border. A Gallup poll released Tuesday found that Americans are most likely to name immigration as the most important problem in the country.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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Originally published on The New York Times