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Mayorkas fields onslaught of GOP attacks over border

April 28, 2022
Mayorkas fields onslaught of GOP attacks over border Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas faced a consistent grind of questions from Republicans who sought to portray the Biden administration as willful agents of chaos and rolled out increasingly personal attacks against a Cabinet secretary who is himself an immigrant. Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee repeatedly made baseless claims that Mayorkas was “intentionally” seeking to disrupt the border. Several raised the specter that migrants might commit crimes or could even be terrorists. It was a line of questioning Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) said sought to “attack and scapegoat immigrants” and that Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.) said contained “new lows.” Mayorkas’s appearance before the House Judiciary Committee comes after Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) vowed to grill the secretary about border policy, only to have his 60-page playbook for the hearing uncovered by The New York Times. GOP lawmakers at the hearing largely stuck to that playbook. They also directed a number of attacks at Mayorkas directly, with Jordan, the ranking member, asserting that would-be migrants would namecheck Mayorkas when deciding to cross the border. And in capping a lengthy tirade in which he said Mayorkas “allowed” opioids into the country and was “responsible” for thousands of girls being sold into prostitution, Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.) suggested he would go down in infamy as a traitor to the country. “No parents with the last name Arnold name their kids Benedict,” he said, referencing the defector to the British army. “What would the Mayorkas family do down the road?” Buck added. Mayorkas is a relatively unique last name, its spelling often indicating Sephardic Jewish heritage. “Congressman, I have so much to say in response to what you just said,” Mayorkas replied. “It is so profoundly offensive, on so many different levels, in so many different regards. I won’t ask you for an apology,” said Mayorkas, rattling off his years of service as a federal prosecutor and Homeland Security official. Buck cut him off to say, “Don’t.” Republicans spent ample time asserting that migrants pose an elevated criminal risk — a false claim favored by former President Trump on the campaign trail. Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.), for instance, accurately stated that Texas is one of the few states that keep records on criminality by immigration status, before peltering Mayorkas with a series of statistics on crimes committed by immigrants in the state. “The latest report from the state of Texas reports that between June 1 of 2011 and November 30 of 2021, 356,000 criminal aliens were booked into Texas jails, of which 243,000 were identified as being in the country illegally,” Steube said.
“You are describing people seeking asylum in our country with a broad brush of criminality,” he said, later noting that sentiment could be applied to people like his parents, who immigrated with Mayorkas to flee communist Cuba. Lawmakers also sought to push a narrative that immigrants who commit crimes are not deported by the administration — something Mayorkas also countered. Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) at one point said Mayorkas should be rounding up migrants “like they were in the Capitol on Jan. 6.” Under the Biden administration, Homeland Security has prioritized deporting those that have committed serious crimes rather than broadly seeking to remove all undocumented people who are in the country.