The Big Border Change Harris Isn’t Talking About

A Biden administration border policy that has had a dramatic impact isn’t getting campaign play.

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The Big Border Change Harris Isn’t Talking About | INFBusiness.com

The border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez in Mexico in June, when the Biden administration put into effect a measure allowing border officials to turn back migrants quickly when crossings exceed a certain level.

Good evening. Tonight, my colleague Hamed Aleaziz, who covers immigration, looks at why the sharp drop in border crossings isn’t playing a bigger role in the presidential campaign. Plus, I want to hear about your favorite books about politics. — Jess Bidgood

The Big Border Change Harris Isn’t Talking About | INFBusiness.com

By Hamed Aleaziz

The situation at the southern border looks very different these days.

Gone are the headlines about surging border crossings crushing border communities and cities like New York struggling to fund housing for migrants who recently came to the country.

The reality is that the numbers at the southern border have dropped to levels not seen before in the Biden administration — and lower than they were during parts of the Trump administration.

The dramatic drop in border crossings came after a Biden administration policy seen by White House officials as a major success for an administration that has spent three years fighting Republican attacks over its handling of surging border crossings.

Vice President Kamala Harris, however, has not focused on the dramatic change at the southern border in her presidential campaign. Tonight, I’ll explain what’s happening at the border, and offer some theories about why Harris isn’t talking it up.

The border had seen a steady drop in crossings all year, but things took a dramatic turn in June. That’s when the Biden administration took a hallmark of the failed immigration bill from February — a measure allowing border officials to turn back migrants quickly when crossings exceed a certain level — and put a version of it into place via presidential proclamation.

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Source: nytimes.com

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