Blaze News original: While Biden-Harris cheer southern border 'victories', a migrant invasion from Canada grows



The Biden-Harris administration, in an attempt to deflect blame for the unprecedented immigration crisis it has created and overseen for the past several years, frequently highlights the reduced number of crossings at the southern border. Meanwhile, both the administration and Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign seem to deliberately ignore the escalating situation at the U.S.-Canadian border.

A closer look at the northern numbers

Customs and Border Protection data reveals that the northern border experienced just over 27,000 encounters in fiscal year 2021. By 2024, this number had surged by 637%, reaching nearly 199,000 encounters.

The Swanton Sector, covering 24,000 square miles and including Vermont, along with several counties in New York and New Hampshire, has become by far the most heavily trafficked section of the U.S.-Canadian border.

In fiscal year 2024, Border Patrol agents manning the Swanton Sector encountered more than 19,000 individuals. For comparison, the next busiest northern sector, Blaine — which services Alaska, Oregon, and half of Washington — reported fewer than 2,500 encounters over the same period.

While the number of encounters impacting the northern border's most heavily trafficked sector may appear inconsequential compared to the staggering reports from its southern border counterparts, the stats reveal a terrifying trend.

Swanton Sector Chief Patrol Agent Robert Garcia stated in an early October post on X, "Border Patrol Agents in Swanton Sector have apprehended more than 19,222 subjects from 97 different countries since October 1, 2023, which is more than its last 17 fiscal years combined."

Executive order fallacy: Statistical smoke and mirrors

Despite this alarming data, the Biden-Harris administration continues to boast about reductions in southern border encounters. Yet these slightly lower figures remain astronomically high compared to those under previous administrations.

The administration's numerous so-called "lawful pathways" have hidden the true extent of the immigration crisis. While the number of illegal crossings — defined as individuals attempting to cross the border between ports of entry — has decreased, the overall number of foreign nationals entering the country has been skyrocketing under President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris' leadership.

The current administration has repeatedly credited Biden's June executive order, 89 FR 48487 — Securing the Border, for the reduction in illegal crossings over the second half of 2024. From June to September, encounters at the southern border dropped roughly 22%.

‘We still are giving those families that are crossing with their vehicle Notice to Appears, and they took us on the chase.’

The administration claims that the executive action grants the federal government the authority to shut down the border once daily encounters reach 2,500 for seven consecutive days.

However, it includes numerous exceptions, such as expediting the entry process for foreign nationals who used Customs and Border Protection's CBP One application to schedule an appointment at a port of entry to request asylum.

Moreover, the executive order applies exclusively to the southern border and therefore has no effect on reducing the escalating encounters at the northern border.

Border Patrol agent reveals northern border chaos

Zachary Apotheker, a Border Patrol agent who was previously stationed at the southern border before transferring to the Swanton Sector, told Blaze News, "We're very slammed up here."

"I've actually worked harder on the northern border than we have down south because, per capita, we have less agents to do so much work," he said.

"We have a lot of drive-throughs up here, which means people will physically take a vehicle and drive from Canada into America, which should be a massive crime. You're not just crossing; now you're taking a vehicle across. You're driving past an international boundary," Apotheker explained. "If it's a family, sometimes they've taken us on chases."

Apotheker recounted an incident in which a vehicle sped past him at 70 miles per hour on a dirt road, driving through the international boundary. He started to pursue but was called off the chase.

"Later on, someone found the vehicle. It was a family," Apotheker continued. "We still are giving those families that are crossing with their vehicle Notice to Appears, and they took us on the chase. And that's happened more than once."

A Notice to Appear, or Form I-862, is given to noncitizens entering the country, instructing them to appear before an immigration judge. Although United States Citizenship and Immigration Services states that this document is "the first step in starting removal proceedings against" the individual, the overwhelmed immigration system means noncitizens receive court dates years in the future, effectively allowing them to stay in the U.S. until their court date.

‘Detaining all individuals without identification … may hamper DHS' ability to prioritize detention for individuals identified as a possible national security or public safety risk.’

Apotheker told Blaze News, "And the kicker is, if they bring a rental, we tow the rental to the yard. We don't seize rental vehicles. We tow the rental vehicle. They go back after we release them into the country, and they get the rental back."

He stated that those illegally crossing the border are "looking at us as a joke."

"There's no incentive to stop," he said. "We have the legal authority to do our job and punish these people, but we're not allowed to do so."

"It's just a game to them," he added, referring to the illegal border crossers.

Terror watch-list encounters

The Department of Homeland Security's 2025 Homeland Threat Assessment, published in early October, acknowledged that northern border encounters "continue to increase."

Through July of fiscal year 2024, CBP reported 283 individuals on the terrorist watch list who attempted to enter the U.S. via the northern border, according to the report. This number was slightly down from the 375 encounters in the previous year over the same time frame.

"In contrast to the U.S.-Mexico border, many watch-list encounters along the U.S.-Canada border occur at ports of entry, and the vast majority of these individuals have legal status in Canada," the DHS report read.

The agency anticipates that terrorists "will continue their efforts to exploit migration flows and the complex border security environment to enter the United States."

The DHS' assessment omitted mention of concerning findings from a September DHS Office of Inspector General report, which discovered that agencies, including CBP, had released noncitizens into the U.S. without identification. When individuals fail to provide identification, it is more challenging for federal officials to determine whether they are on the terrorist watch list.

‘There is also no consistency on what documentation they are saying young people need.’

"If noncitizens do not have identification such as an unexpired visa, unexpired passport, re-entry permit, border crossing identification card, or document of identity and nationality, immigration officers may deny their admission and subject them to removal from the United States without further hearing or review," the IG report explained. "However, if noncitizens without identification indicate they either intend to apply for asylum or express a fear of persecution in their home country, an immigration officer will refer them for a credible fear interview. If asylum officers determine those claims are credible, these noncitizens may be released into the country to await further hearings or reviews of their claims to admission."

The report concluded that neither CBP nor Immigration and Customs Enforcement "could determine how many of the millions of noncitizens seeking entry in the United States each year entered without identification and whose self-reported biographic information was accepted."

These federal law enforcement agencies are not required to record how many noncitizens present identification documents.

The OIG provided the DHS with three recommendations as part of the report's findings. The DHS rejected all three.

One of the recommendations, directed at CBP, advised the agency to "conduct a comprehensive analysis of the risks associated with releasing noncitizens into the country without identification and develop and implement policies and procedures to mitigate those risks."

The DHS responded with a non-concurrence, arguing, "Although CBP acknowledges the broad intent of the recommendation, mitigating potential risks associated with releasing noncitizens into the country without identification requires broadly detaining noncitizens, including those noncitizens lacking documentation, for a time exceeding 'short-term' detention. … Further, detaining all individuals without identification would seriously risk DHS exceeding its detention capacity, and may hamper DHS' ability to prioritize detention for individuals identified as a possible national security or public safety risk."

To this, the OIG countered that without the ability to confirm an individual's identity, CBP "faces challenges in identifying noncitizens who pose a national security or public safety risk."

Trusting words over evidence

"We're taking people's word," Apotheker told Blaze News. "The adults may not show up with documents, but then the children may not show up with documents, or maybe false documents. So we're just taking their word that this child is now this person's child."

"We really can't definitely say, and we can't track them," he continued. "A lot of these countries, we don't have their criminal history."

‘If we do give them an expedited removal … they still may be granted asylum.’

Apotheker detailed that while adults crossing the border undergo fingerprinting, iris scans, and DNA swabs and are photographed, such biometric data is not gathered for children under 14 years old.

Unaccompanied minors entering the U.S. are handed over to the Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Refugee Resettlement, which seeks to place these children with sponsors in the U.S.

"Maybe a relative's house. How do we even know that it's the relative's house, and then who's following up on it?" Apotheker questioned.

Records released in October revealed that nearly 7,000 unaccompanied children arrive in New York City each year, the New York Post reported. During a city council hearing, experts noted a 60% rise in unaccompanied minors in the city over the last four years.

Jamie Powlovich, a supervisor at the Coalition for the Homeless, informed city lawmakers, "We've also seen young people whose passports were falsified so that they could flee."

"But all their other documents or certificates from their home country to indicate that they are in fact minors and then [the city Administration for Children's Services] does not take them," Powlovich said. "There is also no consistency on what documentation they are saying young people need."

The credible fear loophole and asylum case outcomes

In some circumstances, single adults crossing the border are subject to "expedited removal," a process intended to swiftly remove them from the country. Apotheker indicated that is not always the case.

"We allow them a credible fear hearing, which is up to an asylum officer to clear," he told Blaze News. "If we do give them an expedited removal, we're going to hold them or have them at a holding facility up until the point they have a credible fear hearing. And they still may be granted asylum."

According to United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, if a foreign national "indicate[s] an intention to apply for asylum, express[es] a fear of persecution or torture, or express[es] a fear of return to your country," he "must be referred to an asylum officer for an interview to determine whether you have a credible fear of persecution or torture."

Recent data from USCIS, spanning October 2023 to October 15, 2024, shows that out of over 170,000 credible fear cases, fear was not established in approximately 32% of them.

Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse found that in fiscal year 2024, immigration judges denied asylum in 56% of the cases, granted it in 42%, and provided another form of relief in just 2% of cases.

Immigration courts are grappling with a backlog exceeding 1.1 million asylum cases in fiscal year 2024, with foreign nationals waiting more than 1,400 days — almost four years — before their asylum hearing dates.

While many of the Biden-Harris administration's destructive policies that have led to the open-border crisis can quickly be reversed by a new administration committed to national security, the enormous backlog in immigration courts will likely pose significant challenges well beyond Biden's tenure in the White House.

CBP did not respond to a request for comment.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Without Mass Deportations, America’s Demographics Shift Will Result In Radical Politics

Democrats understand that the short-term backlash for our open borders is just the cost for a long-term payoff in maintaining power.

British home secretary enrages UN by telling Americans that 'misguided dogma of multiculturalism' has 'failed'



British Home Secretary Suella Braverman issued a blistering speech in Washington Tuesday, denouncing the "failed" and "outdated" immigration policies that have compromised the stability, security, and sovereignty of Western nations.

The conservative politician drew a parallel between the crises at the U.S. southern border and in the Mediterranean, stressing in her American Enterprise Institute keynote address that "uncontrolled immigration, inadequate integration, and a misguided dogma of multiculturalism have proven a toxic combination" for the West.

The British government indicated that in the year ending June 2023, 52,530 illegal aliens stole into the U.K. — four nations with a collective population of roughly 67 million souls. About 85% of these illegal migrants arrived by boat. The U.K. also received 74,751 asylum claims.

Under President Joe Biden, the United States — a nation with a population of over 335 million — saw over 232,000 illegal aliens steal into the nation just last month.

The Independent reported that Braverman, born to migrants from Mauritius and Kenya, recognizes the benefits of legal immigration. However, she emphasized Tuesday that such benefits rely upon the integration of migrants into the culture of their newfound homelands — a feat she prides her parents on having achieved "wholeheartedly."

"Multiculturalism makes no demands of the incomer to integrate," said Braverman. "It has failed because it allowed people to come to our society and live parallel lives in it. They could be in the society but not of the society."

For instance, the U.K. has observed the emergence of a parallel legal system in its midst, taking the form of Sharia councils.

The European Conservative noted in April that estimates put the number of Sharia councils in England and Wales at around 80, with more on the way. Braverman's predecessor noted that these councils have subjected various British women to discriminatory decisions that wouldn't otherwise fly under the legitimate law of the land.

"And, in extreme cases," continued Braverman, these balkanized migrant populations "could pursue lives aimed at undermining the stability and threatening the security of society."

Braverman referenced Leicester, England, in her speech as a prime example of how multiculturalism contra monocultural multiracialism has proven ruinous.

The English city has been a hotbed for tribal violence, particularly between Hindus and Muslims.

Just as with the Eritrean-Ethiopian violence that Western nations have unwittingly imported, the New York Times highlighted last year that Indian civil strife has found asylum in Leicester along with waves of warring migrants.

According to Braverman, the influx of migrants to the U.K. and the European continent "has been too much, too quick, with too little thought given to integration and the impact on social cohesion."

"If cultural change is too rapid and too big, then what was already there is diluted," continued Braverman. "Eventually it will disappear."

France is among the European nations to have recently paid a price for its failure to integrate new residents. In the wake of a police-involved shooting of a motorist of Algerian descent, riots swept the nation, leaving thousand of buildings torched, thousands of businesses looted, historical sites razed, and memorials desecrated.

Italy too has reaped the whirlwind, just last week seeing its island of Lampedusa, which has a native population of 6,000 residents, inundated with well over 8,500 illegal aliens, many of whom were military-age single men who had set sail from Libya.

Extra to stressing that illegal immigration and a failure to integrate pose an "existential challenge" to the U.S. and U.K. alike, Braverman questioned whether the United Nation's 1951 Refugee Convention was "fit for our modern age," noting that laws once intended to protect people from persecution have been transmogrified to protect people from bias. She suggested that "we will not be able to sustain an asylum system if, in effect, simply being gay or a woman or fearful of discrimination in your country of origin is sufficient to qualify for protection."

Braverman's speech and her suggestion that she will look into reforming the European Convention on Human Rights and the U.N. Refugee Convention with her peers at home and in the U.S. — reforms she indicated others have failed to pursue for fear of being called "racist or illiberal" — have driven leftists and the U.N. up the wall.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, whose organization relies upon British pounds to stay afloat, rebuked the home secretary's remarks, stating, "The refugee convention remains as relevant today as when it was adopted. Where individuals are at risk of persecution on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity, it is crucial that they are able to seek safety and protection."

"An appropriate response to the increase in arrivals and to the U.K.’s current asylum backlog would include strengthening and expediting decision-making procedures," added the UNHCR. "The need is not for reform, or more restrictive interpretation, but for stronger and more consistent application of the Convention and its underlying principle of responsibility-sharing"

LGBT activist and London assembly member Andrew Boff, whose city has a foreign-born population of 37% and a non-British population of 22%, said that Braverman should stop engaging in "dog whistle" politics, adding that "talking about the victims of persecution as if they are the problem is incredibly unhelpful and really paints us as an uncaring party. I'm deeply unhappy with it."

Despite receiving overwhelming criticism from various bureaucrats and leftist politicians, Braverman has so far held her ground.

Listen to Braverman's remarks in full:

Keynote Address by UK Home Secretary Suella Bravermanyoutu.be

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

This is what Texas is doing to stop Biden’s border chaos



The Biden administration hasn’t just ignored illegal immigration at the southern border but has seemed to encourage it. Now, Texas is left to defend the state’s border alone, and it’s not looking pretty.

Governor Greg Abbott has deployed a barrier of buoys down the middle of the Rio Grande, as he believes the state is dealing with a serious immigration crisis.

Pat Gray and Keith Malinak aren’t convinced it’s the best way to keep illegal immigrants out, noting the immigrants could likely easily swim under.

“It’s pathetic that a state has to do this,” Malinak says, “and not a federal government.”

“We’re not supposed to have to,” Gray agrees, “it’s supposed to be protected by the federal government. Which it isn’t, and hasn’t been for a long time, which is why we’re in the situation we’re in.”

Gray notes that there are hundreds of potentially dangerous criminals coming over the border everyday, despite claims that the number is small.

According to Gray, no number is too small.

“How many did it take on 9/11? 18. Took 18 people. It doesn’t take hundreds of people to cause real problems in this country, so I don’t know why we can’t get them serious about border protection.”

But it’s not just the border that is putting America in danger.

“Don’t look now, but the U.S. national debt has increased by $1 trillion since the debt ceiling was suspended last month,” Malinak adds.

“They’re hitting us at every, every corner. Every single corner they possibly can,” Gray agrees.

“The biggest threat, as you know, is climate change,” Malinak says, mocking the left’s obsession with going green.

“Well, that and white supremacy,” Gray adds, joking, “between those two things, I’m scared to death.”


Want more from Pat Gray?

To enjoy more of Pat's biting analysis and signature wit as he restores common sense to a senseless world, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

It’s Impossible To Talk About Immigration Honestly When The Left Insists It’s Racist To Love Your Country

Having clear rules around when hospitality ends and permanent residency begins is the key to stable politics and preventing conflicts.

The United States Doesn’t Have To Go To War With Russia To Prevent A Russian War With Ukraine

In its current borders, Ukraine can’t have both territorial integrity and political independence. It knows that and has already chosen the latter.