Biden doesn’t need a bill to fix border, he just refuses to enforce the law

President Biden all but threw up his hands on the border crisis Tuesday. “I’ve done all I can do,” he falsely claimed. “Just give me the power,” he told reporters. “Give me the people” — “Border Patrol” and “judges” — “who can stop this and make it work right.”

Days before, the president said he supports a still-unseen Senate proposal, claiming it would give him “a new emergency authority to shut down the border when it becomes overwhelmed.”

But Biden doesn’t need any new legislation or power to secure the border — he just needs the will to do it.

Existing law not only allows the Department of Homeland Security to detain aliens apprehended at the border — it requires the department to do so.

The administration’s insistence on “catch and release” in lieu of that detention mandate is the border crisis’s biggest driver.

Border Patrol agents in December nabbed nearly 250,000 illegal migrants at the southern border and almost immediately cut more than 191,000 of them loose, allowing them to remain in the country — perhaps forever. Most of the rest will probably be released, too.


Even if Congress refused to pony up detention cash, the president already has the power to send illegal migrants back across the border to await their asylum hearings.

Donald Trump used that authority when crafting “Remain in Mexico,” and Biden retains that power. He just won’t use it.


Then there’s Section 212(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which gives the president authority to “suspend the entry of all aliens or any class of aliens.” If that sounds familiar, it’s because it’s similar to but broader than Title 42 — it’s not limited to public health emergencies.


Finally, the law allows DHS to expedite the removal of illegal migrants who don’t make asylum claims without first having to obtain a deportation order from a judge.


Biden claims he needs additional powers to secure the border, but prior administrations showed that existing authorities are more than adequate.

The issue’s not power but will, and Congress can’t legislate that.