The floodgates of migration are sure to open unless President Trump wins a second term.
Former Vice President Joe Biden has vowed to undo the signature migration policies of President Trump if he makes it to the Oval Office, and he may have help in his endeavors thanks to a group of Republican lawmakers who appear poised to hand him the votes he needs to score a voting majority in the Senate.
Last week, several Republican senators and members of the House were caught attending a “summit” meeting hosted by the “American Business Immigration Coalition,” a pro-amnesty group consisting of big business donors, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, as well as the George Soros-funded United We Dream organization.
It wasn’t a surprise to see top Democrats such as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) and Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin (Ill.) present.
What was disappointing was the presence of the Republicans: Senators Marco Rubio (Fla.), John Cornyn (Texas), Susan Collins (Maine), and Thom Tillis (N.C.), along with Representatives Mario Diaz-Balart (Fla.) and Will Hurd (Texas).
Also present was CNN’s Ana Navarro, along with representatives from a plethora of left-wing and pro-migration big-business groups.
The meeting was titled the “American Business Immigration Coalition” and featured representation from pro-migration organizations such as Florida Immigrant Coalition, CASA (which provides would-be immigrants with form preparation assistance), the Coalition for Humane Immigration Rights (CHIRLA), and the National Immigration Law Center (NILC). Yet the office of Senator Marco Rubio, who delivered a video message to the meeting about the Paycheck Protection Program, claimed he is not part of broader immigration discussions at this time.
Rubio, of course, was one of the original Gang of Eight Republicans and Democrats who tried to pass amnesty and a path to citizenship for illegal aliens back in 2013.
Steve Cortes, the president’s 2020 Campaign Senior Advisor for Strategy, criticized the lawmakers for participating in the event.
“Why would these supposedly-conservative GOP lawmakers lend legitimacy with such radicals and self-interested oligarchs to thwart the interest of working-class American citizens?
“Such appeasement never makes policy, nor political sense. And certainly not now, as so much of America struggles to regain economic prosperity and a sense of normalcy in a time of pandemic.”
As Cortes notes, Zogby exit polling found that 76 percent of Americans believe immigration should be limited as long as joblessness remains elevated due to the coronavirus outbreak. Moreover, exit polls found that 73 percent of Latinos want reduced migration in general, while 60 percent want ongoing, lasting reductions of legal migration in order to protect the employment prospects of American workers.
“Defying media narratives that constantly castigate President Trump as a racist and our movement as xenophobic, the 2020 election results highlight the diverse, enduring appeal of a nationalist agenda,” Cortes writes. “In fact, the very president that built hundreds of miles of wall and proposes merit-based immigration policies earned the largest share of minority votes of any Republican candidate in 60 years.”
Biden has vowed to forge “a pathway to citizenship for over 11 million undocumented people in America.” His other migration-related pledges include ending the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) that keep migrants in Mexico as their hearings play out. Known as the “Remain-in-Mexico” policy, the Trump administration says it has played a crucial role in ending “catch-and-release,” by which migrants are released into the United States and then go into hiding, avoiding deportation.
Mass migration and open borders are one of the top planks necessary for the globalists to achieve their aim of centralized world government, as it inevitably erodes national borders and sovereignty while leading to the establishment of regional governing blocs which eventually become global governing blocs.
Because the global elites have no ideology other than their own conglomeration of power, it’s quite common to see supposedly conservative pro-business groups partnering with left-wing organizations on the topic of migration. The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), one of the top globalist establishment hubs seeking the subversion of America’s sovereignty, stated in a report that “openness to trade and immigration are vital for maintaining U.S. technological leadership.”
In the end, however, the only ones who truly benefit from mass migration are those who seek to become oligarchs over an unsuspecting populace. The ones who suffer are the people.