A bipartisan bill to address the surge of migrants at the southern border is sowing discord within the Senate GOP as Trump urges them to kill it.

Senate Republicans are in deep distress over whether to support a plan to fix the migrant crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border that includes key concessions they had demanded from Democrats months ago in exchange for approving new U.S. aid to Ukraine.

The bipartisan legislation is expected to be unveiled as early as Friday, giving senators time to review the text before a planned procedural vote next week. But with former President Donald Trump, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and much of the right whipping opposition to the bill before it has even been unveiled, its future in the Senate appears to be in serious jeopardy.

Republicans have for years called on President Joe Biden to address the crisis on the border, insisting that the elevated flow of migrants is an urgent national security threat and calling for legislation to address it. But with an agreement in sight after four months of negotiations, many in the GOP now say that Congress doesn’t need to pass new legislation and that Biden ought to simply take executive action to fix it. Some have openly admitted they don’t want to give Biden a victory ahead of the November presidential election by letting him take off the table an issue on which he rates poorly among the electorate.

  • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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    -35 months ago

    You honestly think they’re clueless about American politics on a macro level? Maybe they are, but how else would you explain the surge at the border? Perhaps there’s new/sudden unrest in our Southern neighbors I’m ignorant of?

    • admiralteal
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      55 months ago

      It doesn’t take that much to explain a 20% increase in numbers. I know you tried to frame it like it was some ABSURDLY huge increase, but I don’t consider an extra person for every five to be such a mind-blowing spike.

      The same economic stagflation/recession happening everywhere else, including here. The states being emigrated from are continuing to decline and populations continue to grow. There’s going to be YOY increases. Probably not 20% YOY increases, but there will definitely be increases.

      To be clear, I basically agree with you that it is more than we can handle. I’ve posted as much elsewhere in this thread. And I agree that we already are failing to take care of our own people, and having extra mouths is going to stretch our failing social welfare programs even more taught.

      To be clear though, even just regular birthrates in the US are around 12 per capita – that is 4M new people per year that we can “handle” already. And just as before, I don’t consider ~1 extra person for every 5 to be a mind-blowing figure.

      None of this is the reason we’re failing to get the “crisis” deflated. We’re not processing these immigrants because we both hate them and have weaponized our incompetence against them. Basically the same bad faith and weaponized incompetence that have brought us into our own domestic crises – housing, healthcare, labor rights, and all that.

    • Aniki 🌱🌿
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      -15 months ago

      Maybe they are, but how else would you explain the surge at the border?

      Easy peasy! There isn’t. I don’t trust the CBP numbers in the slightest.

      • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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        -35 months ago

        “I don’t believe in gOvERnMenT numbers I don’t like! I don’t believe the CDC! Masks and vaccines are boolshit!”

        Take that conservative thinking back to FB. Adults are talking.