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Big border surge didn’t happen. But calls persist for an overhaul.

Last week’s lifting of a pandemic-era measure used to expel migrants had Washington and border communities bracing for a massive border surge.

So far, that hasn’t materialized. But the policy change has put a new spotlight on the ongoing challenge of record-high levels of illegal immigration – and whose responsibility it is to fix it.

Why We Wrote This

Many were bracing for a ballooning of already record-high levels of illegal immigration last week, sparking renewed efforts to address border security and a broken immigration system.

Many are skeptical that Congress can pass immigration reform. But Sen. Angus King, a Maine independent, believes a deal could be made. “The difficulty – and I can tell you as a person who has worked on this for some time – is knowing what to do at the border,” he says.

Democrats say a comprehensive deal is needed to fix an obviously broken immigration system, and that securing the border can’t be separated out from other problems.

Republicans beg to differ. They say the Trump administration showed that illegal immigration could be vastly reduced through disincentives and stepped-up enforcement, and that the situation at the border is too serious to wait for a gridlocked Congress to act.

“Right now, the No. 1 most immediate threat to our national security is this open border,” Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas told journalists on a GOP tour in Brownsville, Texas, with Border Patrol agents who represent their national union.

The official end of the pandemic public health emergency on May 11, and the lifting of a key measure used to expel migrants, had Washington and border communities bracing for a massive border surge.

So far, that hasn’t materialized. But the concerns and countermeasures surrounding that policy change are putting a new spotlight on the ongoing challenge of record-high levels of illegal immigration – and whose responsibility it is to fix it.

Many are skeptical that Congress can pass comprehensive immigration reform. Still, Sen. Angus King, a Maine independent, sees areas of agreement. Both sides want better control over the border, he says, and many would like to help the “Dreamers” – the children of unauthorized immigrants. Every business group that comes to his office highlights workforce challenges, yet he points to asylum-seekers in Maine who want to work but can’t.

Why We Wrote This

Many were bracing for a ballooning of already record-high levels of illegal immigration last week, sparking renewed efforts to address border security and a broken immigration system.

“I believe there’s a deal [to be made],” he says. “The difficulty – and I can tell you as a person who has worked on this for some time – is knowing what to do at the border.” 

The current U.S. system can’t cope with the number of asylum-seekers, and migration is only likely to increase due in part to climate change in tropical countries, he adds. “I haven’t run into anybody yet that has a clear, unequivocal, easy solution.” 

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