Laughing Biden tells press post-Title 42 is ‘much better than you all expected’

President Joe Biden hailed a drop in border crossings since the end of Title 42 with a swipe at the media β€” as new strains in the government’s ability to contain the wave of migrants are just beginning to emerge.

When asked how things were going after the expiration of Title 42’s expiration, which ended at midnight, Biden told a group of reporters with a chuckle, “Much better than you all expected.”

He also spoke of reduced crossings, which have fallen by around 50 percent as migrants – and smugglers preying on their status – assess the new regulatory regime.

β€œThey have fallen, I hope they will continue to fall, and we still have a lot of work to do,” Biden said while cycling near his beach house in Rehoboth, Delaware.

His comment came after Vice President Kamala Harris said at a fundraiser that things were going “quite smoothly,” despite problems with processing and border state governors bringing migrants into northern cities and reporting administrative issues to those jurisdictions.

President Biden said things went “much better than you all expected” at the border, in his first remarks since Title 42 ended Sunday

β€œAnd we also need a little more help from Congress on funding and legislative changes,” Biden said.

Biden referred to the stark new data.

Border Patrol agents have seen the number of migrants crossing the US from Mexico drop by 50 percent since Title 42 expired at midnight Thursday, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said.

The number had soared leading up to the end of the pandemic restriction, reaching more than 10,000 a day.

But as they work their way through the system, some new migrants are getting court dates well into the future.

A Venezuelan told the Washington examiner he’s facing a court date in Oregon in a year β€” and his mom “was told to wait 10 years before she can see a judge.”

A 39-year-old Venezuelan man was due to appear in court on March 11, 2027.

Migrants reach through a border wall for clothing handed out by volunteers as they wait between two border walls to seek asylum on Friday, May 12, 2023 in San Diego.  The number of migrants crossing the border fell by about 50 percent since the end of Title 42. Biden said it

Migrants reach through a border wall for clothing handed out by volunteers as they wait between two border walls to seek asylum on Friday, May 12, 2023 in San Diego. The number of migrants crossing the border fell by about 50 percent since the end of Title 42. Biden said it “went better than you all expected”

Venezuelans are among the migrants from a handful of countries that can qualify for special parole, where people can apply in advance and get a two-year work permit while they remain in the country.

It all comes amid a backlog in court cases of a staggering 2 million.

After 10,000 daily border encounters for several days in a row last week, Mayorkas said the number dropped to 6,300 encounters on Friday and about 4,200 on Saturday.

β€œIn the past two days, the United States Border Patrol has seen its number of encounters drop 50 percent from what we saw earlier in the week for Title 42 on Thursday at midnight,” he told CNN’s State of the Union. program.

‘It’s still early. We’re on day three. But we’ve been planning this transition for months and months.”

Border Patrol agents have seen a 50 percent drop in the number of migrants crossing the U.S. from Mexico, according to Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas

Border Patrol agents have seen a 50 percent drop in the number of migrants crossing the U.S. from Mexico, according to Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas

A major gathering point for migrants was abandoned Friday morning in Yuma County, Arizona
Migrants line up for processing on Thursday morning

This was the scene on Friday morning close to the border wall outside of Yuma, Arizona. It was deserted. About 24 hours earlier, the queue of migrants waiting for trial was 300 strong

He also appeared on ABC’s “This Week” to spread the message that the Biden administration had succeeded in advertising that the country’s borders were not open.

DailyMail.com was at the border in Yuma, Arizona, Thursday night as hundreds of people rushed to enter the US before Title 42 ended.

But the next morning the place was all but deserted. Experts said they believe migrants and people-smuggling gangs are trying to get to grips with a new immigration policy.

Mayorkas admitted it was too early to say the number had peaked, but he said Washington’s message was getting through.

“We have very clearly communicated an extremely important message to those individuals who are thinking about arriving at our southern border: There is a lawful, safe and orderly way to arrive in the United States,” he said.

β€œThat is through the paths that President Biden has expanded in an unprecedented way.

“And then there’s a consequence if someone doesn’t use those legal avenues, and that consequence is removal from the United States, deportation and a five-year ban on return, and possible criminal prosecution.”

Title 42 was activated by the Trump administration to contain the spread of COVID-19. It is a public health measure that allows border authorities to immediately deport arrivals before they can even apply for asylum.

Immigrants seeking asylum in the US, trapped in a makeshift camp between US-Mexico border walls, sit as a Customs and Border Protection officer stands guard as other migrants line up to be transported on May 13 2023

Immigrants seeking asylum in the US, trapped in a makeshift camp between US-Mexico border walls, sit as a Customs and Border Protection officer stands guard as other migrants line up to be transported on May 13 2023

But now that the pandemic was over, it ended at midnight eastern time on Thursday.

The Biden administration rushed through new restrictions, effectively reinstating Trump’s “transit ban,” which allows for the deportation of arrivals who did not seek asylum in countries they traveled through.

Migrants can legally report to the border if they have used a mobile app, CBP One, to pre-register.

But there were snags. An 11th-hour legal challenge blocked plans to speed up the release of migrants from Border Patrol detention.

The rapid decline in numbers will ease the pressure on detention centers that have far exceeded their capacity.

Nearly 300 newly arrived migrants were released by officials in Yuma, Arizona, on Friday, illustrating how border towns are grappling with a huge wave of arrivals over the past week.

Nearly 300 newly arrived migrants were released by officials in Yuma, Arizona, on Friday, illustrating how border towns are grappling with a massive surge

Nearly 300 newly arrived migrants were released by officials in Yuma, Arizona, on Friday, illustrating how border towns are grappling with a massive surge

Migrants were seen on buses in Yuma, Arizona coinciding with the end of Title 42 and the lifting of a Trump-era restriction to prevent the spread of COVID-19

Migrants were seen on buses in Yuma, Arizona coinciding with the end of Title 42 and the lifting of a Trump-era restriction to prevent the spread of COVID-19

On Friday afternoon, three white buses with darkened windows drove into the Yuma Public Safety Training Facility close to the city's airport.

On Friday afternoon, three white buses with darkened windows drove into the Yuma Public Safety Training Facility close to the city’s airport.

On Thursday, Yuma’s mayor announced that CBP planned to release migrants into the city who had not yet undergone full processing, though he insisted they had been “vetted.”

And on Friday afternoon, three white buses with darkened windows drove into the Yuma Public Safety Training Facility close to the city’s airport.

The location was a closely guarded secret, but DailyMail.com was on hand to witness the release. A briefing document said 141 were released.

Streams of people could be seen climbing out of the buses and being led into a shaded waiting area, where there was at least some shelter from 96F temperatures.

From there it is understood that they are put on buses to take them to Phoenix.

It followed a similar release of about 140 people at a separate location in Yuma and nearby San Luis in the morning.

Yuma County Supervisor Jonathan Lines said the process was a recognition that federal authorities simply could not handle.

“This is depressing and the federal government is relying on the local and state government to do its job,” he said.

β€œIt is another failure by the Biden administration to solve a problem they created with their open borders policy.”