Plus: Mexicoâs heat wave, health care in Texas, and more
June 6, 2024 [View in browser]( Hello again! I'm back, now that a nasty bug has released me from its clutches. Today we have Matt Collette, the managing editor of the Today, Explained podcast, here to talk about how America approaches immigration.
âCaroline Houck, senior editor of news [Xochilt Nunez, front, and Immigrant rights groups starts a ''Pilgrimage for Citizenship'' from Denver to Greeley to pressure Colorado's congressional delegation to sign on to support the bill to update the nationwide Registry Act ] Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post via Getty Images Our identity crisis on immigration President Joe Biden this week signed an executive order that would [cap the number of asylum-seekers]( able to enter the United States at the southern border. Itâs arguably the most restrictive border policy heâs taken as president â one that puts him more in line with former President Donald Trumpâs immigration policies â and would reshape Americaâs asylum system if allowed to take effect. The shift comes after Republicans, pressured by former President Donald Trump, moved in February [to kill a bipartisan immigration bill theyâd once supported](. The bill, which Biden and Democrats supported, would have made it easier to expel migrants from busy crossings at the southern border, itself already a shift away from immigrantsâ rights approaches that had defined policy attempts from the left in recent years. âWhile Congressional Republicans chose to stand in the way of additional border enforcement, President Biden will not stop fighting to deliver the resources that border and immigration personnel need to secure our border,â a White House spokesman [said in a statement Monday](. But this political move â even if it does survive [likely court challenges]( â is less a solution to Americaâs interlocking immigration crises, and much more a symptom of the countryâs inability to create a cohesive federal solution to the crisis. [Democratic lawmakers hold a sign saying ''save asylum'' and voice their opposition to President Joe Biden's new policy on asylum] Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images How immigration divides â and also unites â America Border crossings are at an [all-time high](. Non-border cities are finding themselves [unable to provide services for migrants](. And thereâs a [record years-long backlog]( of cases of people seeking asylum. As [Voxâs Nicole Narea explained](, the crisis isnât really the number of people who are coming; itâs more that the type of migrant has shifted â from lone male economic migrants to families (many of whom are seeking asylum) â and Americaâs immigration systems are not designed with this in mind. All that contributes to todayâs immigration debate being [more polarizing]( than any other issue the US has grappled with in nearly 25 years. Thatâs according to Gallup, which polls Americans each month on what they consider to be the most important issue facing the nation. For three consecutive months now, immigration has topped that list, beating out the government (overall), the economy, and inflation. That masks a huge partisan divide: While 48 percent of Republicans said it was the most important issue in Gallupâs most recent poll, just 8 percent of Democrats did. At the same time, Gallup finds the support for immigration that does exist is often rooted in idealism. âThey welcome immigration in concept,â [Lydia Saad](, a research director for Gallup, told Sean Rameswaram on a recent episode of Today, Explained, âbut theyâre concerned about illegal immigration.â âThe thing about immigration is that on some level, it's always a conversation about what we want America to be,â [Dara Lind](, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council (and a former Vox immigration reporter), told [Today, Explained](. [border wall] Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images That polarization is creating a self-perpetuating cycle One major factor complicating our national immigration debate is that for all the talk on the issue, the country has done very little to legislate on it. Sure, [presidents have taken charge with executive action](, and [states are increasingly trying to get in on the game](. But the last major federal immigration legislation passed [way back in 1996, under President Bill Clinton](. That law increased enforcement while decreasing the number of legal pathways to enter the country, which ultimately, Lind argues, led to a lot of the mess weâre seeing today. Presidents after Clinton moved the needle on immigration, but none signed legislation even remotely comprehensive. The closest a piece of immigration policy got to becoming law was [2013âs âGang of 8â bill in the Senate](, which included provisions to step up border enforcement in exchange for a path to citizenship for some immigrants already in the country. It could not survive the increased partisanship that emerged during the Obama years: âThere was polling at that time that showed that Republicans supported the bill â until you told them Obama supported it,â Lind says. âImmigration was an issue that resisted polarization for a long time, and then that stopped.â Riding high on that message of brokenness, naturally, is former (and he hopes future) President Donald Trump. Heâs approaching 2024 with [an even tougher approach]( to immigration than he had in either 2016 or 2020 â a plan that includes â[closing the border](â and [mass deportations](. âSo Americans have hit this point where, you know, they don't necessarily know the ins and outs of the policy issue,â Lind says. âThey absorb this message that it's broken.â While the current federal immigration situation is stuck somewhere between deadlocked and dystopian, state and local governments are trying to find solutions. âI think it is important for local governments and cities to prove that these problems can be solved so people don't lose all faith that government can figure anything out,â [Denver Mayor Mike Johnston](, a Democrat elected in 2023, tells Today, Explained. âBecause we actually can.â Denver has recently welcomed some 40,000 immigrants, especially since Texas and some other southern states began [busing migrants to blue cities](. And while it has created problems, [especially around housing, encampments, and city spending](, Johnston is confident that the city has found a way to work around the current broken immigration system. Central to Johnstonâs enthusiasm is the cityâs new [Denver Asylum Seeker Program](, which provides asylum seekers with housing, food assistance, and job training. âWhat we've done is set up an infrastructure,â says Johnston, that pairs a federal six-month waiting period for asylum-seekers to obtain work authorization with a city-run job-training program. The city says the program sets immigrants up for financial security and ultimately [costs less than relying on housing shelters](. Other blue cities â including some âsanctuary citiesâ â have struggled more to accommodate recent migrants. Absent congressional action, many are actively working on ideas that include [work visas for immigrants]( (something Canada already does, and which states like Indiana and Utah have in the past lobbied the federal government for), [improved coordination around immigrant arrivals]( (a favorite cause of big-city mayors like Johnston and [New Yorkâs Eric Adams](), and better sharing of best practices. Ultimately, experts say, federal action is needed. But âwe're not gonna wait for anyone else to save us,â Johnston says. âNow weâve just got to figure it out ourselves.â You can listen to the entirety of the Today, Explained podcastâs two-part series on immigration [here](. âMatt Collette, managing editor of the podcast Today, Explained. Additional reporting by Hady Mawajdeh and Sean Rameswaram. [Listen]( Immigration lemonade When it comes to immigration solutions, the federal government is handing out lemons. Denver Mayor Mike Johnston is making lemonade. 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