President Biden is expected to sign an executive order on Tuesday allowing him to temporarily seal the U.S. border with Mexico to migrants when crossings surge, a move that would suspend longtime protections for asylum seekers in the United States.
Mr. Biden’s senior aides have told members of Congress in recent days to expect him to sign the order at the White House alongside mayors from South Texas, according to several people familiar with the plans.
“I’ve been briefed on the pending executive order,” said Representative Henry Cuellar, Democrat of Texas, who has previously called on the president to bolster enforcement at the border. “I certainly support it because I’ve been advocating for these measures for years. While the order is yet to be released, I am supportive of the details provided to me thus far.”
The order would be the most restrictive border policy instituted by Mr. Biden, or any other modern Democrat, and echoes an effort in 2018 by President Donald J. Trump to curb migration that Democrats assailed and federal courts blocked.
Although the executive action is almost certain to face legal challenges, Mr. Biden is under intense political pressure to address illegal immigration, a top concern of voters before the presidential election in November.
The decision shows how the politics of immigration have tilted sharply to the right over the course of Mr. Biden’s presidency. Polls suggest growing support — even in the president’s party — for border measures that Democrats once denounced and Mr. Trump championed.
The order would allow border officials to prevent migrants from claiming asylum and rapidly turn them away once crossings exceed a certain threshold. (Minors who cross alone are likely to be exempt from the restrictions, according to an official briefed on the order.)
Typically, migrants claiming asylum are released into the United States to wait for court appearances, where can they can plead their cases. But a huge backlog means those cases can take years to come up.
Government officials discussed allowing Mr. Biden to shut down the border this year if an average of more than 5,000 migrants per day tried to cross illegally in a week, or more than 8,500 tried to cross on a given day.
In recent days, White House officials have discussed a limit of 2,500 illegal crossings per day. That would mean the border could be closed to asylum seekers as soon as Mr. Biden signs the executive order because daily totals currently exceed that number.
Still, people involved in the negotiations cautioned that details were still being worked out.
The number of people illegally crossing the border has declined significantly in recent months after reaching record highs in December, when about 10,000 people a day were making their way into the United States.
Biden administration officials, panicked over the numbers in December, pressed Mexico to do more to curb migration. Mexican officials have since used charter flights and buses to move migrants deeper south and away from the United States.
On Sunday, border agents apprehended more than 3,500 people crossing without authorization, in line with the trends of recent weeks, according to a person with knowledge of the data.
The executive action is likely to mirror a measure in a failed bipartisan bill this year that had some of the most significant border security restrictions Congress had considered in years. The bill would have provided billions in funding for the border, including for the hiring of thousands of asylum officers to process claims.
But Republicans thwarted the bill in February, saying it was not strong enough. Many of them, egged on by Mr. Trump, were loath to give Mr. Biden a legislative victory in an election year. The president’s aides hope the executive order will provide him with an opportunity to hammer Republicans for their decision to kill the bipartisan bill, which would provided billions to the Department of Homeland Security.
“While congressional Republicans chose to stand in the way of additional border enforcement, President Biden will not stop fighting to deliver the resources that border and immigration personnel need to secure our border,” Angelo Fernández Hernández, a White House spokesman, said in a statement on Monday. He did not confirm the plans but said the administration was exploring “a series of policy options, and we remain committed to taking action to address our broken immigration system.”
Administration officials have said that executive action was not their preference and that they believe any order would face a legal challenge.
“Legislation is what is needed,” Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the homeland security secretary, said last month.
“Executive action will be challenged,” he added. “I am confident in that. And then the question will be: What is the outcome of those proceedings? Legislation is a more certain delivery of solution.”
The American Civil Liberties Union led the charge against the Trump administration’s attempt to block asylum in 2018, which resulted in the policy being stopped by federal courts. The group has signaled that it is ready to challenge any order that limits asylum at the border.
“We will need to review the E.O. before deciding on litigation, but any policy that effectively cuts off protection for desperate migrants would raise serious legal problems, as it did when the Trump administration tried to end asylum,” said Lee Gelernt, a lawyer at the A.C.L.U. who led the challenge against many of Mr. Trump’s policies.
While Republicans have long assailed Democrats over border security, Mr. Biden in recent years has also faced calls by members of his own party for stronger enforcement.
Representative Tom Suozzi of New York, a Democrat who won a special House election this year partly by calling for stricter immigration measures, sent a letter to Mr. Biden last month encouraging him to issue an executive order that would restrict asylum.
“I think it’s very, very important, not only for Democrats or for political purposes, but it’s important for America,” Mr. Suozzi said in an interview. “This is something the people are very concerned about.”
But there are also political risks to issuing the executive order. Republicans have in recent days questioned why Mr. Biden did not take unilateral action at the border sooner. In January, he told reporters that he had “done all I can do” at the border and that he needed help from Congress.
“The American people know better,” Speaker Mike Johnson, Republican of Louisiana, wrote in a social media post on Monday.
In a sign of just how much the politics on the issue has changed, Mr. Biden, as a candidate in 2019, excoriated Mr. Trump’s policies during a debate.
“This is the first president in the history of the United States of America that anybody seeking asylum has to do it in another country,” Mr. Biden said at the time. “That’s never happened before.”
“You come to the United States, and you make your case,” he added. “That’s how you seek asylum, based on the following premise: why I deserve it under American law.”
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