What does the border look like a week after Biden executive action?

(NewsNation) — Nearly a week after President Joe Biden announced executive action aimed at restricting asylum, migrant numbers remain high, and officials on the front line say the legislation is not acting as a deterrent and not much has changed.

The long-anticipated presidential proclamation bars migrants from being granted asylum when U.S. officials deem that the southern border is overwhelmed. The order goes into effect when the number of border encounters between ports of entry hits 2,500 per day, according to senior administration officials.

According to the latest data obtained by NewsNation, there has not been a single day since its implementation where Border Patrol has encountered less than 2,500 migrants, exceeding that number by 1,000 nearly every day.

Officials have also indicated issues with holding capacity, triggering issues with removals.

As of Sunday, the Tucson Sector is above capacity, while San Diego continues to lead in migrant encounters and apprehensions.

This comes as border agents and officers are following specific guidance, including a processing disposition labeled “Securing the Border,” according to officials from the Department of Homeland Security.

Terrell County Sheriff Thaddeus Cleveland says Biden’s move was purely political and is not having a positive impact on the southern border whatsoever.

Cleveland says while there has been some decrease in activity at the border, he does not attribute this to Biden’s executive action.

“We’ve seen a decrease in activity, which has been fortunate for us, given us some time to kind of catch our breath and deal with some other issues,” Cleveland said. “What has transpired with this administration going from historic amounts of activity, talking about just levels of activity that we’ve never seen before and now putting a number we’re going to, you know, shut the border down to 2,500 people, you can’t just stand up for security and then shut down border security.”

Now, a lot of questions remain about how to implement the rollout of the executive action.

When the executive action was first announced last week, GOP lawmakers signaled there were enough holes in the legislation to “drive a truck through.”

Border officials are reporting they don’t have the resources or means to deport everyone, especially not people from countries in South America, Asia, Africa and Europe.

A DHS document outlined that some of the banned demographics and nationalities encountered at the border are more difficult to deport. They give priority to detaining migrants who can be easily deported, followed by harder-to-remove nationalities, which require at least five days to issue travel documents, then the very hard-to-remove nationalities whose governments don’t accept U.S. flights.

Thousands of migrants under the banned list have already been deported, according to DHS officials. However, the agency has acknowledged they just don’t have the means to deport everyone.

Customs and Border Patrol Commissioner Troy Miller put out a directive to agents saying he is aware that they don’t have the resources but are advocating for the “resources and enforcement tools that the agents deserve.”

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GOP Oversight chair hit with bipartisan demands to enforce Bondi deposition



Every since Attorney General Pam Bondi was fired last week, it has left the unsettled question of whether she still has to sit for the upcoming congressional deposition, where among other things she was set to be asked about the Jeffrey Epstein case files.

The GOP-led commission has stated Bondi won't attend. In a letter to House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-KY) revealed on Wednesday, Reps. Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Nancy Mace (R-SC) demanded that he publicly clarify she does, in fact, still have to participate.

"We moved to subpoena Pam Bondi, and the Committee voted to approve this motion on a bipartisan basis, because the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) still has not complied with the Epstein Files Transparency Act ... and because serious questions remain regarding the DOJ's non-compliance and their handling of the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and his associates while she was Attorney General," said the letter.

Bondi's dismissal as AG, they wrote, "does not diminish the Committee's legitimate oversight interests in seeking her sworn testimony or the need for accountability and information about files withheld from the public by the DOJ. On the contrary, it makes her sworn testimony even more important, especially with respect to actions she took as Attorney General, matters already under investigation, and decisions made under her leadership."

The handling of the Epstein files was reportedly at least one of the reasons Trump decided to remove Bondi, a longtime MAGA loyalist who oversaw a number of prosecutions of Trump's political enemies, from the Justice Department.

Bondi's abrupt reversal on the files, telling the public there was no "client list" and nothing new of note in the files after she had spent months hyping it up to Trump supporters, played a huge part in fracturing the MAGA coalition and reducing public support for the president. Since legislation was passed compelling the release of all Epstein files, Bondi also presided over the department as it slow-walked that process and blew through important legal deadlines.

"The American people deserve answers about whether Congress was misled and whether information is being withheld by the DOJ," said the letter, telling Comer, "We ask you to publicly reaffirm that Pam Bondi must appear on April 14 for a sworn deposition as ordered or face appropriate enforcement if she refuses to comply."