McALLEN, Tex. — The number of migrants crossing the U.S. southern border illegally has dropped more than 40 percent in the three weeks since President Biden announced broad restrictions on asylum claims, administration officials said Wednesday.
U.S. agents have taken fewer than 2,400 migrants into custody per day over the past week, down from more than 3,800 at the beginning of June, according to the latest Department of Homeland Security data. That is the lowest level of illegal crossings since Biden took office, DHS said.
The shift was evident Tuesday in the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas, which has been one of the borderâ€
The Tucson area in the Arizona desert saw a similar decline in unlawful crossings, DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said during a news conference in that border city Wednesday.
“The presidentâ€
It is not unusual for agents to see a short-lived decline in crossings whenever the government announces a major crackdown. Illegal entries soared to record levels late last year but have been trending downward over the past several months, in part due to more aggressive enforcement by the Mexican government.
Biden administration officials released the border data on the eve of the first debate of 2024 scheduled Thursday between the president, a Democrat, and the presumptive Republican nominee, former president Donald Trump.
Biden administration officials hope the falling numbers of migrants can blunt Republican criticism of the presidentâ€
Homeland Security officials cautioned the results of the crackdown were preliminary, and cast the measures as an attempt to balance tougher enforcement with more generous opportunities for migrants to reach the United States legally.
Biden has “carried out the largest expansion of lawful pathways and orderly processes in decades,� according to a DHS fact sheet on the latest data, measures that are “freeing up the asylum system for those with legitimate claims.�
Republican lawmakers have urged Trump in recent days to target Bidenâ€
“I hope President Trump confronts President Biden with this dangerous result of his open border policies at Thursdayâ€
The American Civil Liberties Union and immigrant advocacy groups are suing to block Bidenâ€
The United Nations refugee agency has said it is also “profoundly concerned� that the new measures may deny access to asylum for people who are eligible for it.
U.S. immigration laws allow anyone who reaches U.S. soil to seek humanitarian protection if they have a well-founded fear of persecution in their home country. The emergency measures Biden announced June 4 suspend access to those protections on an emergency basis, arguing the U.S. immigration system is too overwhelmed by illegal crossings and insufficient resources.
Bidenâ€
Lower number of illegal crossings have allowed U.S. agents to better safeguard the border and increase patrols, the department said, “enhancing DHS efforts to interdict individuals who pose a threat to public safety.�
The DHS statement echoed the administrationâ€
DHS said the number of migrants who are allowed into the United States with a pending court date after crossing illegally — the practice derided as “catch and releaseâ€� — has dropped 65 percent under Bidenâ€
Maria Sacchetti contributed to this report.