'He has zero operational control of the southern border': Congressman clashes with CNN host over Mayorkas impeachment

'He has zero operational control of the southern border': Congressman clashes with CNN host over Mayorkas impeachment



Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (R-N.Y) butted heads with CNN host Brianna Keilar over the topic of record illegal immigration at the southern border as well as the possible impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

D'Esposito, a Republican from New York, said that Mayorkas had "betrayed" the country by letting millions of illegal immigrants and alleged asylum-seekers across the border.

Keilar questioned the congressman as to why Republicans were looking to impeach Mayorkas as opposed to attempting to work with Democrats and pass immigration legislation.

"The Republicans have laid out, over the last 13 months, a really comprehensive review and investigation into the dereliction of duty of Secretary Mayorkas. It's clear he has zero operational control at the southern border," D'Esposito declared.

"We've set new records here in the United States, and they are not ones we should be proud of. We've seen almost 3.8 million individuals that have come across our borders since the president has taken office. We have nearly 1.8 million that have come to this country, these are people that we know of," he added.

\xf0\x9f\x8e\xa5 WATCH: \xe2\x80\x9c@SecMayorkas has set new records in America, and they\xe2\x80\x99re not ones we should be proud of.\xe2\x80\x9d\n\nIt\xe2\x80\x99s time to #ImpeachMayorkas.
— (@)

Keilar then complained that the legislation put forth by Republicans "pushes asylum-seekers to only legal points of entry and then does not increase any funding for that."

"It’s been 220 days since Chuck Schumer has received the Secure the Border Act from House Republicans. 220 days and only until recently —" D'Esposito explained, before Keilar interjected.

D'Esposito was referring to H.R.2, which prohibits "DHS from processing the entry of non-U.S. nationals (aliens under federal law) arriving between ports of entry" and also directs Homeland Security to resume the building of the U.S.-Mexico border wall.

"This is legislation that doesn’t really make sense," the host stated. "I mean your policy proposals in it are not backed up by any sort of funding that would actually pay for what you are calling to do. You want to allow children to go from being detained from three days to allowing it to be 30 days in adult detention facilities."

"What we want to do is begin to secure our border, which is clear that the Biden administration and the Democrats have failed to do," the congressman replied.

According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data, Border Patrol had more than 2 million encounters, while field operatives came into contact with another million people. This totaled over 3.2 million encounters with illegal immigrants in the United States and on its borders.

In ICE's latest statistics, it was revealed that 142,580 noncitizens were deported; a 4.4% deportation rate in relation to border encounters.

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'The invasion is real': Border county officials call on Texas to use Constitution to end Biden's border crisis



Republican officials in several Texas border counties have declared that the illegal immigration crisis is an "invasion" of their communities and called on Gov. Greg Abbott to declare an emergency and begin deportations.

Officials from Uvalde, Terrell, Kinney, and Goliad Counties held a press conference Tuesday in which they announced that emergency declarations would be forthcoming to call attention to the harms inflicted by the federal government's failure to secure the border.

"I am here to let you know that the invasion is real," Terrell County Judge Dale Lynn Carruthers said.

"We are here to protect the sovereignty of our nation, not just the border of Texas," she added.

The officials said that residents in their communities have seen property damage, increased crime, and other dangers brought by the flow of drugs and human trafficking across the border. They are dissatisfied with the Biden administration's handling of the crisis and are demanding that the Texas state government step in to enforce federal immigration law in the absence of federal law enforcement.

A press release from Kinney County states that in the month of June, local law enforcement has prevented more than 67 smuggling attempts along county roads and encountered over 4,000 illegal aliens "who avoided apprehension by Border Patrol and whose whereabouts are currently unknown."

Since January 2021, more than 3.2 million migrants have been apprehended by law enforcement after entering the country illegally and upwards of 800,000 have slipped past Border Patrol and disappeared into the country, officials pointed out.

\u201cThis is the reality of the #BidenBorderCrisis EVERY SINGLE DAY.\n\n#EndTheInvasion #ImpeachMayorkas #SecureTheBorderNOW\u201d
— Rep. Chip Roy Press Office (@Rep. Chip Roy Press Office) 1657053006

Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin said rampant illegal immigration has brought an influx of pedophiles, convicted murderers, drug dealers, and gang members into his community.

"It’s a nightmare. With the tragedy that we just had, our kids are going to be going back to school in the next 45 days or so, and here we’re going to start agin with the bailouts and so forth. It needs to stop. We need to make them come across the right way so we know who they are and where they’re going,” he said.

Goliad County Judge Mike Bennett told reporters there's been an increase in stolen cars and property damage reported over the last two years. He said increased crime rates are "stealing our resources" because more and more of the county budget has to be directed towards law enforcement.

"The Biden administration won't do a thing about it," Kinney County Judge Tully Shahan said. "We’re in over our head. We need help and we need for Attorney General Ken Paxton and our governor to adopt an invasion under its definition in the Constitution. Adopt that invasion and let’s move forward.”

The counties invoked Article IV, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution and Article 4, Section 7 of the Texas Constitution to declare the existence of an "invasion" of the country. They urged Abbott to do likewise and "take necessary actions to preserve and protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Texas."

\u201cHere it is, the Declaration of Local State Of Disaster by Kinney County. \n\n\u201cThe County Judge of Kinney County, TX, has determined that extraordinary measures must be taken to ensure the protection of the health, safety, and welfare of county residents\u201d\u201d
— Matt Roy (@Matt Roy) 1657048508

Their appeal to the Constitution to have state governments enforce federal immigration law is a strategy that has been put forward by conservative activists, including former Trump administration official Ken Cuccinelli, who has advised the county officials and spoke at the press conference.

Cuccinelli said that using the “self-help provision of the Constitution to declare an invasion … gives the governor, decided similarly, the authority to repeal that invasion.”

An Abbott spokeswoman told the Houston Chronicle that "all strategies remain on the table" to confront the border crisis.

“As the challenges on the border continue to increase, Texas will continue to take additional unprecedented action to address those challenges caused by the Biden administration,” she said.

But legal experts like David Bier, the associate director of immigration studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, have criticized the counties' use of the term "invasion," discounting the criminal elements coming over the border and emphasizing that the federal government has broad powers over immigration policy.

“The people coming are actively seeking to place themselves under the laws of the United States by seeking asylum,” Bier told the Chronicle. “So the idea that the first ‘invasion’ in the history of the world where invaders seek to subject themselves to the law of the country that they’re invading — it’s a total mischaracterization of what an invasion is.”

Legal scholar Jonathan Turley made similar comments to Fox News Tuesday.

"I'm afraid I'm skeptical. As they say in Texas, this dog won't hunt. They're relying on the guarantee clause of Article Four, Section Four, and that deals with an invasion, which is generally interpreted and long interpreted to mean an actual foreign invasion in the form of an army, an organized force," Turley said.

"I don't think a court would seriously consider expanding the term 'invasion' to cover this."

Still, conservative lawmakers are supporting the counties' declaration.

"We are dealing with an invasion," Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) told Fox News Wednesday. "We are dealing with Texans dying from fentanyl pouring into our communities. Our ranchers are getting overrun, their livestock are getting out, their fences are getting cut. Our communities are dealing with that. So all that these leaders in the counties in south Texas are asking for is that Texas step up and we go do what the federal government refuses to do."

\u201c"Texas is the collateral damage of a federal government that is leaving us dangling."\n\nThe people of Texas are experiencing an INVASION. It's time to formally declare that.\n\n#endtheinvasion\u201d
— Rep. Chip Roy Press Office (@Rep. Chip Roy Press Office) 1657122044

"Texas is the collateral damage of a federal government that is leaving us dangling," Roy said.