The latest polling for President Joe Biden is, in a word, bad. And nowhere is he performing worse with members of his own party than on immigration.
Quinnipiac University’s most recent survey has Democrats backing Biden on most immigration-related matters by only the slimmest of margins — if that. Fifty-one percent of those surveyed generally approve of the administration’s treatment of undocumented immigrants. The same number approve of Biden’s handling of immigration overall. When asked whether the Biden team has been too aggressive or too lax or whether it’s acting appropriately on deportations, 49 percent of Democrats chose option three.
This balancing act the White House is attempting was never sustainable.
Meanwhile, only 22 percent of independents approve of Biden’s immigration policies broadly, and just 3 (yes, 3!) percent of Republicans agree.
These numbers tell me two things: 1) Biden’s never going to win over Republican voters on immigration, not with the current state of the party, and 2) Trying to give himself cover politically from GOP attacks is failing miserably. This balancing act the White House is attempting was never sustainable.
Since Biden took office, Republicans have been successfully using immigration, their most politically salient policy holdover from the Trump era, as a wedge issue. Their narrative since January has been that Biden is weak on border security, a framing that, as I explained in March, locks Democrats into a no-win scenario:
That’s why hammering home enforcement is such a win — it creates space for a self-perpetuating problem that only more enforcement can solve. There is no way to fully secure the border so nobody gets through; demanding that set an impossible goal that the Democrats tried to meet for years. And then, when their own policies fail, they say it’s because we just didn’t try hard enough.
Biden’s standing among GOP and independent voters on immigration is the result of that messaging blitz. And, ironically, most of the things Republicans are calling for are things the administration is already doing, much to the chagrin of many Democrats.
Nine Republican governors announced a “border security plan” Wednesday that included, among other things, reinstating the so-called Remain in Mexico policy, which forces migrants to wait for asylum hearings on the southern side of the U.S. border, and enforcing the Title 42 public health ban on asylum-seekers’ crossing into the U.S. Federal courts have already forced the resumption of “Remain in Mexico,” and the administration has been in court fighting activists to keep Title 42 in place.
And just last week, Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., sent a letter urging Biden “to tell the massive migrant caravan approaching our border, ‘You must turn around.’” As though that hasn’t already been what Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas have been doing constantly since taking office.
Today @MarshaBlackburn and I sent a letter to President Biden urging him to tell the massive migrant caravan approaching our southern border, “You must turn around”. pic.twitter.com/MqLrJBTUAa
— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) September 30, 2021
The trap that Biden is in is one that his former boss, President Barack Obama, found himself in well over a decade ago when he was trying to pass needed immigrations reforms. Unfortunately, even though everyone knows America’s immigration laws are a chaotic mess, they’re still the law of the land. So until Congress can get its act together and pass something — a prospect that appears slimmer by the moment — this is the hand Biden has been dealt.
The fastest, simplest step that Biden could take is the repeal of Title 42.
That having been said, there are still areas where changes are desperately needed, changes that center the humanity of the people seeking a home in America — and would stanch the bleeding with Democrats politically.








