Alejandro Mayorkas - Page 13

Exclusive – Utah Mayor Slams Mitt Romney After Announcing Senate Run: ‘Doesn’t Represent Most Utahns’

After announcing his upcoming run for the U.S. Senate, the mayor of Riverton, Utah, slammed Sen. Mitt Romney, who he intends to unseat next year, claiming the former presidential candidate “doesn’t represent most Utahns,” and that he could no longer sit by and watch as Romney and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer “mortgage my children’s future.”

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, questions witnesses during a Senate Health, Education, Labor, an

Washington Post Editors Deny Border Surge

The editors of Jeff Bezos’ Washington Post are claiming the White House has gotten southern migration under control, with a wide front-page headline saying, “At the border, a reset but no surge.”

EL PASO, TEXAS - MAY 09: Immigrants wait near the U.S.-Mexico border fence after crossing

Randy Clark: Final Hours Tick until Biden’s Next Border Debacle Begins

In less than 24 hours, the CDC’s Title 42 COVID-19 expulsion authority will expire. The end of the expulsion authority will mark the final departure from any enforcement policies enacted under the Trump administration that saw migrant crossing numbers quickly drop in late 2019 and 2020. Despite the latest media blitz by the Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas assuring Americans that the Biden administration has things under control, we should all be skeptical.

150 migrants found on Texas freight train near border. (Kinney County Sheriff's Office)

Senators Draft Bill to Keep Title 42 Border Barrier

GOP Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C) and Independent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) have drafted a bill that would enforce the Title 42 border barrier for two years, and curb the catch-and-release policy that has allowed millions of migrants to walk into the United States.

title 42 Biden Immigration

Brownsville Migrant Influx Contradicts DHS Secretary’s Border Claims

DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas’ claim that the border is not open is directly contradicted by the crossing of nearly 2,000 Venezuelan migrants per day into Brownsville, Texas.  The impact of this newest migrant surge along the Texas border is easily viewed from the banks of the Rio Grande and the downtown streets of Brownsville.

A large migrant group surrenders to Border Patrol agents in Brownsville, Texas. (Randy Cla