Analysis: Republicans see election opportunity in Biden border struggles
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[December 21, 2021]
By Ted Hesson and Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The leading
Republican vying to unseat an Arizona Democrat in a crucial U.S. Senate
race next year gets heated when he talks about Democratic President Joe
Biden's "failed border policies," occasionally throwing in expletives
when decrying their alleged financial cost and what he says is the
threat they pose to Americans.
The candidate, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, is betting the
message will resonate with voters Republicans need to mobilize in the
2022 elections to change the balance of power in Congress.
"Immigration in and of itself is not a bad thing," Brnovich, himself the
son of immigrants from Montenegro and Croatia, said in an interview with
Reuters. "But illegal immigration undermines the rule of law."
Echoing some of the hard-line rhetoric of Republican former President
Donald Trump, Brnovich supports the construction of a wall between the
United States and Mexico and tougher immigration enforcement.
His opponent, incumbent Democratic Senator Mark Kelly, is a well-known
retired astronaut and husband to former U.S. Representative Gabrielle
Giffords. His seat has been rated as vulnerable by election trackers
after he won a close victory in a special election last year.
While the Arizona race is one of the most high-profile contests where
immigration has emerged as an attack line for Republicans, the strategy
is not limited to the Southwestern border state.
Republicans across the country are targeting the policy vulnerability
for Biden, whose administration has struggled to curb record arrests of
migrants on the U.S.-Mexico border. Some critics say he has failed to
find a consistent approach on immigration, keeping some Trump policies
in place while rolling back others, inviting attacks on both the right
and left.
"We have gone heavily on offense," said Emma Vaughn, national press
secretary for the Republican National Committee, which plays a central
role in shaping the party's election strategy. "Immigration doesn't just
impact border towns; it impacts Americans everywhere."
Reuters polling backs up the idea that immigration is a prime motivator
for likely Republican voters. A Reuters opinion survey in October of
nearly 1,600 Republicans found immigration topped the list of issues
that would make them "very angry" if the government acted in opposition
to their views.
Democrats, on the other hand, did not rank immigration in any of their
top 12 anger-provoking issues. Researchers have found anger is more
likely to encourage voting compared with other emotions.
Heading into the November 2022 midterm elections, Democrats currently
control both chambers of Congress by a narrow margin. The Senate has 48
Democrats and two independents who caucus with them to 50 Republicans,
giving Vice President Kamala Harris a tie-breaking vote. In the House of
Representatives, Democrats hold 221 seats to the Republicans' 213, with
one seat vacant.
As attorney general, Brnovich filed four lawsuits this year challenging
Biden's immigration actions, including a lawsuit that said Biden failed
to assess the environmental effects of illegal immigration, such as
pollution and stress on natural resources.
Democrat Kelly has also criticized Biden's approach to the southern
border at times, most recently sending a Dec. 16 letter to the president
calling on him to close existing gaps in Arizona's border barriers. At
the same time, Kelly urged Biden to restore areas damaged by Trump-era
border wall construction.
"Your administration must make it a priority to address these issues,"
Kelly wrote. "Arizona deserves better from Washington on the border."
On Monday, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it would take
steps to close "small gaps" remaining from previous border wall
construction and perform other construction work, with a focus on a
stretch of the border in Arizona.
Kelly's tougher border stance contrast with most of his Democratic
colleagues, who disdain Trump's immigration tactics, a reflection of the
threat immigration-focused attacks on the incumbent could pose in the
race.
INTERNAL TENSIONS
Biden took office in January promising to roll back almost all of
Trump's restrictive immigration measures, but he has so far been stymied
by internal tensions within his administration and ongoing court
battles.
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A group of asylum seekers from Mexico, Cuba and Haiti are detained
by U.S. Border Patrol in San Luis, Arizona, U.S., April 19, 2021.
REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
Some of the friction has been evident on the president's Domestic
Policy Council. The council's director, Susan Rice, has tended to
push for tougher enforcement at the border, clashing at times with
her own more liberal staffers, according to a former U.S. official
with knowledge of the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Immigrant advocates who joined the Biden
administration have been disappointed with his approach to the
border, including the mass deportation of Haitians caught trying to
cross from Mexico, a second official, also speaking on condition of
anonymity, told Reuters.
Some Biden officials have acknowledged internally that large numbers
of migrants arriving at the border could derail the president's
broader immigration agenda, Reuters reported earlier this year.
Biden has left in place a sweeping Trump-era border expulsion policy
implemented when the COVID-19 pandemic began, and was ordered by a
court to resurrect another hard-line Trump program that forces
migrants to wait in Mexico as their U.S. asylum cases proceed --
both moves that dismayed advocates.
A White House spokesperson said all Biden staffers were "committed
to implementing a fair and orderly immigration system," and denied
any tensions between Susan Rice and Domestic Policy Council
staffers.
The spokesperson, who spoke on condition of anonymity, added that
Republicans also focused heavily on immigration before the 2018
midterm elections, only to lose the House to the Democrats.
PRESIDENTIAL HOPEFULS
Republicans and their allies are already airing some
immigration-themed commercials, a likely preview of what Democrats
can expect in the coming year.
The Federation for American Immigration Reform, a group that favors
lower levels of immigration, launched a six-figure digital ad
campaign in Texas and Arizona last week that attacks Biden and other
Democrats and depicts the border as lawless.
"President Biden sabotaged the nation's immigration controls," a
man's voice says in the ad over video of migrants clashing with
authorities in Mexico. The ad will air in Spanish and English in an
attempt to reach Hispanic voters.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, both
Republicans facing re-election in 2022, have emerged as leading
critics of Biden's immigration policies. Abbott and DeSantis are
viewed as possible Republican presidential candidates in 2024, and
the White House is closely following their gubernatorial races,
according to a third U.S. official.
The Biden administration is working with allies outside of
government to neutralize the criticism, said the official, who
requested anonymity to discuss internal plans.
One strategy is to remind voters of Trump's "zero tolerance" border
policy, which led to the separation of thousands of migrant children
from their parents and drew international condemnation, the official
said.
The White House is also banking that its efforts to speed up asylum
processing at the southern border - a much-touted plan that has yet
to produce significant results - will gain steam next year.
But many pro-immigrant activists remain unconvinced, including
Jennifer Quigley, senior director for government affairs with the
pro-immigrant organization Human Rights First.
"They do not view humane and lawful entry for asylum seekers as a
winning thing politically," Quigley said.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson and Matt Spetalnick in Washington; Editing
by Mica Rosenberg and Jonathan Oatis)
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