‘Higher Visibility’: How US Immigration Dynamics Are Changing

The humanitarian crisis at the US southern border is a political crisis for President Joe Biden. Cities receiving migrants, meanwhile, are facing a logistics crisis.

From El Paso to Denver and New York, elected officials are increasingly calling for more federal aid to help manage high numbers of arrivals. “The lack of federal support to significantly cover state and local costs, long wait times for migrants to work legally, and large numbers arriving in the country without connections have combined to create an disproportionate burden” on several cities, it concludes a recent article from the Migration Policy Institute in Washington.

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The number of border patrols at the U.S. southern border is nearing a record high. An experienced immigration expert explains how this affects current immigration politics and policy.

The institute’s Doris Meissner has seen the border change since the 1990s, when she was commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the predecessor to immigration agencies now under the Department of Homeland Security.

In an interview, Ms. Meissner discussed the context of global migration and a challenging balancing act that continued to elude Congress — as border patrol this past fiscal year neared fiscal year 2022 records.

How does the United States remain “open and generous to immigration,” she asks, “but at the same time recognize that there are borders… and that border control is an essential feature and responsibility of any government?”

The humanitarian crisis at the US southern border is a political crisis for President Joe Biden. Cities receiving migrants, meanwhile, are facing a logistics crisis.

From El Paso to Denver and New York, elected officials are increasingly calling for more federal aid to help manage high numbers of arrivals. “The lack of federal support to significantly cover state and local costs, long wait times for migrants to work legally, and large numbers arriving in the country without connections have combined to create an disproportionate burden” on several cities, concludes a recent article from the Migration Policy Institute in Washington.

Doris Meissner, director of the institute’s U.S. Immigration Policy Program, recently spoke more about the issue in a telephone interview with the Monitor. Since the 1990s, she has seen the border transform. Under President Bill Clinton, she served as commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the predecessor to immigration agencies now under the Department of Homeland Security.

Why we wrote this

A story focused on

The number of border patrols at the U.S. southern border is nearing a record high. An experienced immigration expert explains how this affects current immigration politics and policies.

Ms. Meissner discussed the context of global migration and a challenging balancing act that has continued to elude Congress – as Border Patrol logged more than 1.8 million encounters along the southern border in the past fiscal year, nearly matching the fiscal year 2022 record. .

How does the United States remain “open and generous to immigration,” she asks, “but at the same time recognize that there are borders?” This conversation has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

Americans have increasingly seen the migration crisis spread beyond the southern border into inner cities, including Democratic strongholds like New York. How has this changed the politics of the national immigration debate?