President Biden and his presumptive opponent Donald Trump each amplified the case of a particular undocumented immigrant last week, using vastly divergent language in a preview of the sharp contrast they plan to draw on immigration during their debate Thursday.
At a June 18 rally in Racine, Wis., Trump railed against a man from El Salvador accused of murdering a Maryland mother of five, calling him an “animal.� About an hour earlier at the White House, Biden praised “angels� like Javier Quiroz Castro, a nurse who served patients suffering from covid-19 at the height of the pandemic.
“Thank you for what you did to help us get through the pandemic, pal, and for all youâ€
The dueling speeches reflect the competing approaches the two candidates are taking as they confront a contentious issue that polls show has become increasingly salient for voters. Those strategies are likely to be on display Thursday, as Trump seizes on a subject that was central to his political rise while Biden argues that Trump is torpedoing actual solutions to preserve a political issue.
As Trump repeatedly cites instances of what he has branded “Biden migrant crime,â€� Biden is aiming to train Americansâ€
Both men are planning to go on the attack on the issue during Thursdayâ€
“Trump and Republicans obviously are not worrying about walking any fine lines on immigration. They have put all their chips on the table in favor of attacking immigrants as criminals, terrorists and economic threats,� said Dan Tichenor, a professor at the University of Oregon who has written about the politics of immigration. “The debate is almost certain to highlight a familiar contrast — Trump assailing immigrant threats and border chaos, and Biden asserting that his opponents are making a false choice between border security and welcoming immigrants.�
The debate could also offer Trump an opportunity to clarify his position on legal immigration after saying last week he supported giving green cards to every foreign student who graduates from a U.S. college. The remark, made during an interview with the “All-In� podcast, drew criticism from some Trump supporters who saw it as a major departure from his broader anti-immigration platform.
Still, the shift in Americansâ€
A YouGov poll conducted for the Economist earlier this month, for example, found that 62 percent of Americans disapproved of Bidenâ€
Voters prefer Trump to Biden on handling immigration by a 2-to-1 margin (52 percent to 26 percent), according to a recent Washington Post-Schar School poll of voters in six swing states. That poll also found 58 percent of voters saying undocumented immigrants in the United States should be offered a chance to apply for legal status while 42 percent said they should be deported to the countries they came from.
Biden, after recent movements that courted — and angered — each side, is bracing for tough questions at the debate, according to aides and advisers, some of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity to preview the event.
This is not a new challenge for the president. Biden took office promising a more humane approach after Trumpâ€
Of late, Biden has sought to take a tougher line on border security, saying that the “goodwill of the American people is wearing thin right now.� He backed a bipartisan bill several months ago that would have effectively shut down the border if illegal crossings surpassed 5,000 a day.
But Republicans, encouraged by Trump, blocked that bill, some saying they wanted to prevent Biden from neutralizing the volatile political issue. In response, Biden recently issued an executive order to block migrantsâ€
“We must face a simple truth: To protect America as a land that welcomes immigrants, we must first secure the border and secure it now,� Biden said on June 4 as he announced the new restrictions.
While liberals and immigration advocates slammed the order as caving to Trumpâ€
Aides suggest Biden will go into the debate ready to aggressively spar with Trump on immigration. He has accused the former president of playing politics on the issue, seeking to exploit the divisive problem rather than solve it. At the same time, Biden has cast other White House actions — including the move last week to protect more than 500,000 undocumented spouses of U.S. citizens — as pragmatic, effective and humane.
“Thereâ€
Specifically, Biden plans to draw a contrast between his recent executive action and Trumpâ€
Republicans predict such arguments are unlikely to sway voters, who trust Trump far more on immigration, and even many Democrats say the most Biden can hope for is to modestly blunt his opponentâ€
At rallies and in social media posts, Trump has telegraphed the kind of attacks he plans to launch Thursday.
“We have a new Biden Migrant Killing — Itâ€
Trumpâ€
“In every poll, Americans trust President Trump over Joe Biden on immigration, and the majority of Americans support President Trumpâ€
“Americans are tired of being put last — and President Trump will put our citizens first again by taking day one action to shut down the southern border and deport Bidenâ€
Aides to Biden say Trumpâ€
Trump has claimed immigrants are “poisoning the blood� of America, falsely accused Biden of facilitating a “holocaust� of missing migrant children and tarred broad groups of immigrants with dehumanizing language.
During a speech to Christian conservatives on Saturday, Trump suggested that “a migrant league of fighters� could be created in which immigrants would be pitted against each other for entertainment.
Biden should not shy away from confronting Trump about such language, said Maria Cardona, a Democratic strategist. “There is a huge, huge pitfall for Trump in going full-bore xenophobia on this,� she said.
Bidenâ€
There will be no studio audience at the debate, and microphones for each candidate will be shut off when they do not have the floor. Without the vocal response of an applauding crowd or the ability to interrupt his rival, Trump could have a difficult time selling his arguments about migrant crime and mass deportations, said Barreto.
“Trump is going to have to convince Americans that the immigrants they know are murderers and killers and rapists,� he said. “And outside of maybe a quarter of his base, the rest of the American public does not believe that.�
Emily Guskin contributed to this report.