A Pro-Immigrant Party Wouldn't Want To Revive the Failed Senate Border Bill
Tim Walz is wrong to insist that it would "keep our dignity about how we treat other people."

As last night's vice presidential debate turned to immigration and border security, Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) hammered Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz for Kamala Harris' policies and performance on those issues, specifically mentioning "criminal migrants," economic concerns, and incoming fentanyl.
"We all want to solve that," countered Walz. "That's why we had the fairest and the toughest bill on immigration," referring to the bipartisan border security bill unveiled this February. Months of negotiations yielded the sprawling bill, which was spearheaded by Sens. Kyrsten Sinema (I–Ariz.), James Lankford (R–Okla.), and Chris Murphy (D–Conn.). It faltered after former President Donald Trump and other top Republicans came out against it. Forty-two Senate Democrats voted in favor, with six opposed.
Harris has been pushing for the bill's revival. If she's elected, Walz said, she'd sign it, which "lets us keep our dignity about how we treat other people." That's a stretch.
The bill did include some reforms, such as additional employment- and family-based visas and work authorizations for the family members of certain visa holders. It would have helped protect Documented Dreamers, who were brought to the U.S. legally as children by parents on nonimmigrant visas and may need to self-deport if they don't secure a green card before turning 21. It also included protections for the Afghans evacuated to the U.S. following the August 2021 Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.
But it also would have ravaged the asylum-seeking process—which is certainly flawed—and likely jeopardized due process and humanitarian protection for vulnerable migrants. The bill's main provision would have significantly limited access to asylum if border crossings exceeded a certain threshold. It would have given Immigration and Customs Enforcement billions to fund more detention capacity and deportation flights. It would have created a hasty screening process and deprived migrants of the opportunity to appear before an immigration judge.
The bill's reforms aside, its restrictions would have made the border a much more dangerous and inaccessible place for people seeking protection. A similar border-buttoning authority during the pandemic didn't prevent crossings, but it did lead to thousands of reported instances of kidnapping, torture, and rape suffered by asylum seekers who were returned to or stopped in Mexico. Fortifying the border against asylum seekers, as the bipartisan bill would've done and as President Joe Biden is now doing, keeps vulnerable migrants in danger.
Harris and Walz's eagerness to defend the failed border bill is a sign of the Democratic Party's rightward shift on immigration and border security this year. The legislation had no grand reform—no pathway to citizenship for undocumented longtime residents, no solution for Dreamers, no farm work visa improvements—to balance the significant asylum restrictions. But the border and immigration have increasingly become liabilities for Democrats (and top priorities for voters), so their messaging has gotten tougher and their appetite for restrictionism has grown.
Congress should work on immigration reform instead of relying on the president to patch up the broken system. As Walz said in yesterday's debate, "You can't just do this through the executive branch." Questions of process aside, this year's bipartisan bill wasn't the silver bullet or the humane solution Democrats keep suggesting.
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Fiona, post what town you live in so we can send all the illegal immigrant there. It's easy to virtue signal but notice you never said how many of the illegals you are helping.
There were only 10,000 known murderers and 15,000 known rapists that are in the US illegally. Same as engineers, doctors, and entrepreneurs.
And given those numbers, we have remarkably little rape and murder being committed by illegals. They really are on their best behavior!
Because, come on, we all know that just a little bit of rape and murder is ok.
Rape? No. We just have cultural misunderstandings about sexual practices.
I have a unique solution for Fiona. A Victor from her home, but make her pay the rent/mortgage while still stuffing the place with illegals. She’ll still need a place to live, so send her to live with Pedo Jeffy.
Speech to text?
To the evictor go the spoils.
try harder
Autocorrect gone awry.
It was a bill that facilitated illegal immigration. Furthermore, a majority of the spending was going to be sent to Ukraine, Israel, and the pockets of special interest groups. The bill was shit.
Open borders fanatics are beyond ridiculous. Even if that is her starting point, the criticisms levied here are garbage and ignore issues that should be glaring to everyone.
It effectively made it impossible for ever tightening up on the border, with those ridiculous daily limits. Now, it’s illegal to cross the border without proper documentation. With the bill, it would be legal, if they claim sanctuary OR are under the daily limit. So, just push your way to the front of the line the day you want to cross the border. As if there weren’t already plenty of criminal violence already at the border crossings.
The reality is that most of the sanctuary claims are bogus. They are mostly economic immigrants, but have been coached by US government funded NGOs on what to say for a sanctuary hearing a decade from now.
most? try 99.99%
"A Pro-Immigrant Party Wouldn't Want To Revive the Failed Senate Border Bill."
What Fiona means is a pro-illegal immigrant bill.
Is pro-immigrant the same as pro-open-borders?
(asking for a friend)
I didn't watch the debate.
Did Walz repeat Fiona's assertion that 1 day on Martha's Vineyard proved once and for all the sincerity of Dem's pro-immigrant rhetoric?
#SendMore
If you leave the tap on full blast, sooner or later the kitchen sink gets filled and runs over onto the floor, ruining your hardwood, and shorting out our fridge.
"But it also would have ravaged the asylum-seeking process"
There should BE no "asylum-seeking" process in the first place! If anyone were allowed to visit or reside in the United States after a simple background check and evaluation for contagious diseases, it would not matter whether they were seeking asylum or not! Not only is that "process" broken, but it is also impossible on the face of it. I don't care why someone wants to live in the United States as long as they support themselves while they're here. If they commit a serious crime while they're here, punish them and then deport them unless they have become citizens.
International law requires that those seeking asylum make their case in the first foreign boarder country. That would include Canada, Mexico and maybe Cuba. Cubans can maybe make the case. And if Zoolander rules the great white north much longer maybe Canadians.
If we did that, we would be inundated with hundreds of millions of immigrants from every shithole country in the world and our culture and prosperity would be destroyed.
Fiona doesn't mention that
(1) The DHS authority to limit (snickers) illegal border crossing sunsets after three years.
(2) Migrants are only forbidden to use the app to apply for asylum. They can still visit a port of entry and apply for asylum, and when they they probably won't count as illegal crossers.
(3) The threshold only concerns anyone who was caught at the border. If you flew in or was caught later, there is no guarantee that they would be counted.
The additional detention centers and border patrol agents would amount to building more hotels for migrants. One border patrol agent considered their present duties as being "concierge" for migrants.
The Haitians in Springfield signed up on an app and bypassed years of background. Success! For a bargain price of millions in housing vouchers and welfare, companies get the privilege of hiring foreign workers. For the people who live there, the endure chaos.
The writers here understand the concept of unintended consequences. They choose to ignore it when it comes to immigration. Look at CA, the state with the most immigrants - nothing there is affordable.
The only thing that matters to Fiona is an unrestricted open border.
A Pro-Immigrant Party
Would that be the regular Friday cocktail party at Reason DC?
How about an article about ending the UN-Constitutional Welfare-State *before* endless articles of whining about Constitutional invasion control???? eh?
Ms. Harrigan leaves out that both Sinema and Lankford voted against the version of the bill that came up for vote. Sinema's change of heart is most telling. She's an independent and former Democrat. Is Fiona saying that Sinema withdrew her support because of Trump's opposition? That doesn't pass the giggle test.
The border bill was a bipartisan compromise and that is the most important thing. We can never solve the problems in the immigration system if we only focus only the what the extreme left or the extreme right see as the perfect solution. Seeking a perfect solution is just a stalemate.
It got solved when Abbot sent all the immigrants to Martha’s Vineyard and the left was instantly cured of their ignorant stupidity. Now it's just a battle of keeping the left form trying so hard to save their stupid-face.
It was not ‘bipartisan’. The independent and the democrat turned against the final version. It was all democrats, and it was a horrible bill.
"But it also would have ravaged the asylum-seeking process—which is certainly flawed—and likely jeopardized due process and humanitarian protection for vulnerable migrants."
Everything in the damn bill was geared to increasing illegal immigration and providing more for "vulnerable migrants" without a care of how it affected vulnerable American citizens. There was no actual border "security" in the border security bill. Even the media realizes that fact. Which is why media never mentions that the bill allowed an average of 5000 alien border-crossers per day for each week. And the President could even suspect that provision at a whim to allow more. The increase in border employees was to process those illegally crossing, not to provide more actual manpower to secure the border.
Last week it was revealed the Biden/Harris administration had deliberately allowed over 600 thousand convicted murders and rapists into our country. As long as it doesn't personally affect Reason writers and law professors, they are fine with that number. The Laken Riley's are just necessary collateral damage to the open borders crowd.
BTW, how many Venezuelan gang members have those law professors invited into their homes? Still zero, I bet. Have they moved from their homes to allow those gang members a place to live rent free? No? Why not? If it is good enough for apartment renters in Aurora, Colorado, it should be good enough for law professors in their gated communities. Have they quit their law school jobs to allow those Haitians to have gainful employment? No? Why not? Oh, that's only for Springfield manufacturing jobs. THOSE people should give up their jobs and homes to the Haitians. It's only fair you know.
Those Venezuelan gang members should enter those professor’s homes anyway. Give those Marxist scumbags a real upfront taste of Harris’ ‘immigration policy’.