Eric Holder to 2020 Dems: Tone Down Immigration Rhetoric or Lose

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Every week, immigration stories demonstrate how frustratingly elusive, even after decades, common sense reform that would benefit immigrants and citizens alike remains.

Sustained border surges and inadequate enforcement have pushed the immigration court backlog to an impossible-to-process 1 million-plus cases. Illegal border crossings hit a 12-year high as border patrol agents detained 851,000 foreign nationals during fiscal year 2019. A billion-dollar Indian outsourcing firm abused the rules that govern the B-1 visa but paid only a token fine. And that’s just a recent sampling of stories.

But every so often, something comes along to restore hope.

It comes as no surprise that former Obama administration Attorney General Eric Holder, who is an advisor to the California legislature, is committed to higher immigration levels and to a comprehensive immigration reform amnesty. In fact, few public officials have more disdain for President Trump than Holder.

Yet in a recent CNN interview with David Axelrod, Holder told his fellow Democrats, and especially the 2020 presidential candidates who support decriminalizing illegal crossings, that “borders do mean something.” Holder also reminded the candidates that President Obama had “robust” deportation totals as well, even higher than the Trump administration and that existing immigration laws have been on the books “for about 100 years,” and should be honored.

Holder even trotted out talking points normally associated with enforcement advocates. Having a secure border, wanting to vet who comes to our nation and protecting the American people shouldn’t be a left versus right issue. Secure borders should be an issue everyone of us agrees on. We’re a nation of laws. People need to respect those laws, especially if they want to become American citizens. Our government has an obligation to protect the American people first. And part of that protection means securing our borders, just as every other nation in the world does.

Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and former Immigration and Customs Enforcement acting director John Sandweg concurred with Holder about the folly of abolishing borders.

Other prominent Democrats have also sounded alarm bells about the potentially fatal, electorally speaking, empty promises to dissolve borders. One of the most visible decriminalization critics is one-time Obama administration immigration policy advisor Cecelia Muñoz. According to Muñoz, decriminalizing unapproved border crossings would make it harder for Democrats to combat President Trump’s populist appeal.

Perhaps other Democratic candidates will emerge. But this particular group appears tone deaf to likely voters’ immigration sentiments, and they proceed at their own peril. A June Gallup poll showed that a record high 23 percent named immigration as the public policy issue that most concerned them, the highest level since Gallup first mentioned immigration in 1993. About 35 percent of Americans want immigration decreased.

The more years that pass, the more likely that Americans will want less immigration. The Census Bureau projects that future net immigration, the difference between the number coming and number leaving, will total 46 million by 2060, and the total U.S. population will reach 404 million. From 1990-2017, immigration grew the U.S. population by 43 million.

The current crop of Democratic presidential hopefuls doesn’t realize it, but an open borders platform is a loser.

Joe Guzzardi is a Progressives for Immigration Reform analyst who has written about immigration for more than 30 years. Contact him at [email protected].