Biden Now Offers ‘Temporary’ Amnesty to over a Million Foreign Nationals
President Joe Biden has hugely expanded the federal government’s Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program, which serves as a de facto amnesty scheme, to allow more than a million foreign nationals to remain in the United States who would have otherwise been considered illegal aliens.
On Friday, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas announced that about 10,000 Cameroonian nationals in the U.S. would become eligible for TPS, including more than 2,000 who will have their TPS extended.
FWD.us, founded by billionaire Mark Zuckerberg, has urged Biden to carry out the huge TPS expansion. Following the Cameroon announcement, President Todd Schulte praised the decision as “great news” and asked that similar decisions be made for the Democratic Republic of Congo and Mauritania.
Behind FWD.us is the nation’s wealthy West Coast, mostly tech, investors who advocate for an endless flow of mass immigration to the U.S. for the benefit of employers.
Those roughly 10,000 Cameroonian nationals join the now more than a million foreign nationals living in the U.S. whom the Biden administration has made eligible for TPS. Most notably, Biden extended TPS to almost half a million Venezuelan nationals in the U.S. after intense lobbying from blue state governors and mayors.
Coupled with Biden’s legal and illegal immigration goals, his administration is carrying out a policy that has massively increased the nation’s foreign-born population.
As Breitbart News reported, the latest analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data shows that as of last month, the nation’s foreign-born population stands at about 49.5 million — just half a million immigrants short of hitting 50 million.
The foreign-born population today represents the largest ever in American history.
TPS was first created under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1990 (INA) and prevents federal immigration officials from deporting those from countries that the federal government has designated as experiencing famine, war, or natural disasters.
Since the Clinton administration, TPS has been transformed into a de facto amnesty program as the Clinton, Bush, Obama, Trump, and now Biden administrations have continuously renewed the program for a variety of countries.
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here.
As Illegals Swarm America, Biden Claims Border Walls Don’t Work
If Biden really believes walls don't work, take down the one around the White House.
Even New York’s Gov. Hochul has suggested that, “We want them to have a limit on who can come across the border. It is too open right now.”
It really is.
A record-setting number of migrants crossed the southern border into the United States in September, with over 260,000 encounters reported by Customs and Border Protection in the last 30 days, according to a report.
Perhaps we should build some sort of obstruction, say a wall, to keep the border closed? It worked for Ancient China. It worked for Israel. It can work for America.
But according to the guy who flooded America with illegal alien migrants so that even the governors of Illinois and New York are starting to think about closing the border, walls don’t work.
“Do you believe the border wall works?” a reporter asked Biden.
“No,” Biden replied.
This was at a press conference on Ukraine, and securing its border is much more important than securing ours.
Speaking of Ukraine, they built 40% of their border wall. And then began building a border fence with Belarus. Finland has built a border fence with Russia. And Russia is building a border fence with Crimea.
So everyone else seems to think walls and fences work.
Notably, the White House has a fence around it. And when Biden took power, D.C. was locked down and parts of it were fenced off.
But if Biden believes that border walls don’t work, why did he sue Arizona and Texas over efforts to build barriers to the illegal alien invaders? If the barriers don’t work, there’s no problem. But his problem was that the barriers do work. What doesn’t work is welcoming in hordes of invaders and then busing them around the country. That isn’t even working for New York City, Chicago and D.C. Never mind America.
But if Biden really believes walls and fences don’t work, take down the one around the White House.
Even New York’s Gov. Hochul has suggested that, “We want them to have a limit on who can come across the border. It is too open right now.”
It really is.
A record-setting number of migrants crossed the southern border into the United States in September, with over 260,000 encounters reported by Customs and Border Protection in the last 30 days, according to a report.
Perhaps we should build some sort of obstruction, say a wall, to keep the border closed? It worked for Ancient China. It worked for Israel. It can work for America.
But according to the guy who flooded America with illegal alien migrants so that even the governors of Illinois and New York are starting to think about closing the border, walls don’t work.
“Do you believe the border wall works?” a reporter asked Biden.
“No,” Biden replied.
This was at a press conference on Ukraine, and securing its border is much more important than securing ours.
Speaking of Ukraine, they built 40% of their border wall. And then began building a border fence with Belarus. Finland has built a border fence with Russia. And Russia is building a border fence with Crimea.
So everyone else seems to think walls and fences work.
Notably, the White House has a fence around it. And when Biden took power, D.C. was locked down and parts of it were fenced off.
But if Biden believes that border walls don’t work, why did he sue Arizona and Texas over efforts to build barriers to the illegal alien invaders? If the barriers don’t work, there’s no problem. But his problem was that the barriers do work. What doesn’t work is welcoming in hordes of invaders and then busing them around the country. That isn’t even working for New York City, Chicago and D.C. Never mind America.
But if Biden really believes walls and fences don’t work, take down the one around the White House.
Daniel Greenfield
Reader Interactions
NOTE THE IMAGE BELOW. THREE PIG LYING LAWYERS (BLINKEN, GARLAND, MAYORKAS) OF THE LAWYER-INFESTED BIDEN REGIME.
In many speeches, Mayorkas says he is building a mass migration system to deliver workers to wealthy employers and investors and “equity” to poor foreigners. The nation’s border laws are subordinate to elites’ opinion about “the values of our country,” Mayorkas claims.
Mexico’s President Flexes His Open-Borders Power over Biden
President Joe Biden’s deputies are offering multiple concessions to Mexican President Andres Manuel López Obrador in the hope that he will conceal the huge and unpopular flow of illegal migrants during the 2024 campaign season.
On Thursday, three of Biden’s cabinet secretaries met with Obrador. He has the power to embarrass Biden during the 2024 campaign with massive, televised eruptions of migrants — such as the September 2021 rush of 15,000 Haitians at Del Rio, Texas.
He has that power because Biden’s deputies have abandoned their duty to enforce the border law and have, instead, triggered a flood of global migrants through Mexico that Mexico’s government can hold or release whenever Obrador chooses.
On Thursday, Attorney General Merrick Garland promised Obrador that he would restrict the supply of U.S.-made guns to Mexico’s cartels, saying that U.S. officials “well understand the dangers of the military-grade weapons that are being trafficked to Mexico.”
The U.S. has doubled the capture of guns smuggled to Mexico during the last year, border chief Alejandro Mayorkas told Obrador. Mayorkas is also quietly allowing roughly 50,000 Mexicans per month to cross the border into U.S. jobs and communities.
On September 29, Secretary of State Tony Blinken told Obrador’s foreign secretary that he would simplify trade with Mexico and let Mexicans get jobs in the Congress’s $50 billion effort to build chip factories in Arizona, Ohio, and other states:
We’ll continue to strengthen, to expand, and diversify supply chains in emerging industries like electric vehicles and semiconductors. Today, in fact, we’re launching a joint semiconductor action plan to accelerate our integration, to scale our efforts to attract new investment.
Blinken touted trade — not U.S. opposition to migration or drugs — as the top priority in negotiations:
By creating the right incentives in business environments and harnessing our two nations’ respective strengths, we have a tremendous opportunity to make North America the most competitive, the most productive, the most dynamic region in the world. That’s what this [U.S.-Mexico] dialogue is fundamentally about.
This bargaining policy is very different from President Donald Trump’s 2019 policy.
In 2019, as migrants flooded across his barely-begun border wall, he bypassed his economic deputies and threatened to impose economic sanctions on Mexico. Obrador quickly gave up and curbed the flow of migrants — which proved very popular in Mexico.
Experts, journalists, and immigration advocates acknowledge that Obrador has power over Biden.
“Mexico has real leverage in the relationship with the US. And right now that leverage is around migration,” Andrew Selee, the president of the pro-migration Migration Policy Institute, told CNN for an October 5 article.
“The government of Mexico views their control over immigration as a bargaining chip in any conversation they have with the United States,” Jon Feere, a top enforcement official in President Donald Trump’s government, said. He added:
The U.S. shouldn’t be tolerating any illegal immigration, and it should be very clear that this has to come to a stop. But the Biden administration is controlled by special interests, and they’re not going to go forcefully into Mexico and make demands ….
It’s the optics that they’re concerned about. So if they can manage it by changing the pace at which it occurs or the way in which it occurs, to make it look orderly, that’s good enough for them.
“They think it’s okay to negotiate over our sovereignty,” Feere said.
“López Obrador very quickly understood that if he gave into Biden’s request for support [on migration] he would have significant political capital to ensure that US pressure on [Mexico] … would be constrained,” former Mexican ambassador Arturo Sarukhán told CNN. One sign of Mexican clout, he said, is that Biden’s deputies are silent about several moves by Obrador to roll back democratic rights, he added.
The two countries have quietly negotiated a series of border security arrangements that have largely prevented another Del Rio PR disaster for Biden. The deal includes Mexican protections for a series of corporate-funded shelters in northern Mexico that help migrants rest before they cross the border.
But Mexico’s clout was also displayed when Obrador met on Thursday with three U.S. cabinet secretaries, Ioan Grillo, a Mexican journalist, noted:
Obrador is using his political leverage over Biden to Mexico’s advantage.
For example, Obrador’s deputies have stifled Biden’s tepid efforts to curb the deadly flow of Mexican-made fentanyl into the United States. On Thursday, one of Obrador’s deputies told the Americans that fentanyl is not being manufactured in Mexico.
The fentanyl smuggling kills roughly 70,000 Americans each year — but it is a huge money-generator for the cartels, Mexico’s economy, and many corrupt politicians in Mexico.
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland was at the meeting — but did not win any drug-related concessions from Mexico.
Biden’s team has failed to win any Mexican curbs on the deadly drug smuggling, partly because they have used their limited leverage with Mexico to hide their efforts to smuggle more than three million global migrants into Americans’ jobs and homes.
Obrador is happy to accelerate migration into the United States — and to boost their political power. In January 2023, for example, he pushed Biden to amnesty Mexicans in the United States:
Just imagine: There are 40 million Mexicans in the United States — 40 million [including people] who were born here in Mexico, [or] who are the children of people who were born in Mexico … I fully trust President Biden … I’ve asked President Biden to insist before the U.S. Congress to regularize the migration situations of millions of Mexicans who have been in the States working, living in the United States, and contributing to the development of that great nation, which is the United States of America.
His foreign secretary, Alicia Barcena, called for even more migration at the September 29 meeting and announced Mexico’s plan to build a multinational alliance for more migration:
Migration is an issue with strong social and economic roots and that is why we have agreed to look at these structural causes of migration. But also, we have seen that the problem on our border – the U.S.-Mexico border, it doesn’t begin there. Really, people are coming from the south. So, we need to have a hemispheric regional perspective to include Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, Venezuela, Haiti, Honduras, Guatemala, Costa Rica. And that is why our president is assuming great leadership in this regard. … We can take control these migratory flows, offer development opportunities, and approve safe and legal pathways. This is essential because we have had a crisis that affected us at our trade crossings as well. So, we need to be very well prepared for this.
Mexico’s plan to create an alliance with Venezuela may also allow Mexico to help U.S. officials implement their new plan to deport some illegal-migrant Venezuelans. The U.S. plan was announced Thursday, but U.S. officials released no details about numbers or timing — perhaps because Mexico has yet to declare the price it will charge to aid the deportations.
Meanwhile, Obrador plays hardball with Biden.
On Thursday, he slammed Biden’s surprise campaign trail decision to build about 17 miles of extra border wall. It is a “step backward,” Obrador complained as he argued that “the poorest countries have to be helped” by migration.
Biden’s officials and their business donors are very eager to get more migrants from Obrador — but only if the huge inflow can be kept orderly and hidden from U.S. voters who are increasingly opposed to both illegal and legal migration.
Biden’s deputies also want to pretend the migrant flood is caused by uncontrollable foreign disasters, not by the Democrat party’s open-border offer of jobs, housing, and government aid to foreign migrants.
“Our two countries are being challenged by an unprecedented level of migration throughout our hemisphere,” Mayorkas told the meeting, adding:
The United States is committed to continuing to work closely with Mexico as we implement a model that pairs a historic expansion of safe, orderly and lawful pathways for migrants to come directly to the United States or elsewhere to obtain humanitarian relief outside the grip of [cartel] smugglers.
In January 2023, the Cuban-born, pro-migration border chief rebuffed Republican demands for an effective anti-drug policy. “We are doing that which needs to be done,” Mayorkas answered.
Since January, at least 50,000 mostly discarded Americans have died from fentanyl as employers open many low-wage jobs for the indebted migrants that are being extracted from poor countries:
President Joe Biden’s deputies are offering multiple concessions to Mexican President Andres Manuel López Obrador in the hope that he will conceal the huge and unpopular flow of illegal migrants during the 2024 campaign season.
On Thursday, three of Biden’s cabinet secretaries met with Obrador. He has the power to embarrass Biden during the 2024 campaign with massive, televised eruptions of migrants — such as the September 2021 rush of 15,000 Haitians at Del Rio, Texas.
He has that power because Biden’s deputies have abandoned their duty to enforce the border law and have, instead, triggered a flood of global migrants through Mexico that Mexico’s government can hold or release whenever Obrador chooses.
On Thursday, Attorney General Merrick Garland promised Obrador that he would restrict the supply of U.S.-made guns to Mexico’s cartels, saying that U.S. officials “well understand the dangers of the military-grade weapons that are being trafficked to Mexico.”
The U.S. has doubled the capture of guns smuggled to Mexico during the last year, border chief Alejandro Mayorkas told Obrador. Mayorkas is also quietly allowing roughly 50,000 Mexicans per month to cross the border into U.S. jobs and communities.
On September 29, Secretary of State Tony Blinken told Obrador’s foreign secretary that he would simplify trade with Mexico and let Mexicans get jobs in the Congress’s $50 billion effort to build chip factories in Arizona, Ohio, and other states:
We’ll continue to strengthen, to expand, and diversify supply chains in emerging industries like electric vehicles and semiconductors. Today, in fact, we’re launching a joint semiconductor action plan to accelerate our integration, to scale our efforts to attract new investment.
Blinken touted trade — not U.S. opposition to migration or drugs — as the top priority in negotiations:
By creating the right incentives in business environments and harnessing our two nations’ respective strengths, we have a tremendous opportunity to make North America the most competitive, the most productive, the most dynamic region in the world. That’s what this [U.S.-Mexico] dialogue is fundamentally about.
This bargaining policy is very different from President Donald Trump’s 2019 policy.
In 2019, as migrants flooded across his barely-begun border wall, he bypassed his economic deputies and threatened to impose economic sanctions on Mexico. Obrador quickly gave up and curbed the flow of migrants — which proved very popular in Mexico.
Experts, journalists, and immigration advocates acknowledge that Obrador has power over Biden.
“Mexico has real leverage in the relationship with the US. And right now that leverage is around migration,” Andrew Selee, the president of the pro-migration Migration Policy Institute, told CNN for an October 5 article.
“The government of Mexico views their control over immigration as a bargaining chip in any conversation they have with the United States,” Jon Feere, a top enforcement official in President Donald Trump’s government, said. He added:
The U.S. shouldn’t be tolerating any illegal immigration, and it should be very clear that this has to come to a stop. But the Biden administration is controlled by special interests, and they’re not going to go forcefully into Mexico and make demands ….
It’s the optics that they’re concerned about. So if they can manage it by changing the pace at which it occurs or the way in which it occurs, to make it look orderly, that’s good enough for them.
“They think it’s okay to negotiate over our sovereignty,” Feere said.
“López Obrador very quickly understood that if he gave into Biden’s request for support [on migration] he would have significant political capital to ensure that US pressure on [Mexico] … would be constrained,” former Mexican ambassador Arturo Sarukhán told CNN. One sign of Mexican clout, he said, is that Biden’s deputies are silent about several moves by Obrador to roll back democratic rights, he added.
The two countries have quietly negotiated a series of border security arrangements that have largely prevented another Del Rio PR disaster for Biden. The deal includes Mexican protections for a series of corporate-funded shelters in northern Mexico that help migrants rest before they cross the border.
But Mexico’s clout was also displayed when Obrador met on Thursday with three U.S. cabinet secretaries, Ioan Grillo, a Mexican journalist, noted:
Obrador is using his political leverage over Biden to Mexico’s advantage.
For example, Obrador’s deputies have stifled Biden’s tepid efforts to curb the deadly flow of Mexican-made fentanyl into the United States. On Thursday, one of Obrador’s deputies told the Americans that fentanyl is not being manufactured in Mexico.
The fentanyl smuggling kills roughly 70,000 Americans each year — but it is a huge money-generator for the cartels, Mexico’s economy, and many corrupt politicians in Mexico.
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland was at the meeting — but did not win any drug-related concessions from Mexico.
Biden’s team has failed to win any Mexican curbs on the deadly drug smuggling, partly because they have used their limited leverage with Mexico to hide their efforts to smuggle more than three million global migrants into Americans’ jobs and homes.
Obrador is happy to accelerate migration into the United States — and to boost their political power. In January 2023, for example, he pushed Biden to amnesty Mexicans in the United States:
Just imagine: There are 40 million Mexicans in the United States — 40 million [including people] who were born here in Mexico, [or] who are the children of people who were born in Mexico … I fully trust President Biden … I’ve asked President Biden to insist before the U.S. Congress to regularize the migration situations of millions of Mexicans who have been in the States working, living in the United States, and contributing to the development of that great nation, which is the United States of America.
His foreign secretary, Alicia Barcena, called for even more migration at the September 29 meeting and announced Mexico’s plan to build a multinational alliance for more migration:
Migration is an issue with strong social and economic roots and that is why we have agreed to look at these structural causes of migration. But also, we have seen that the problem on our border – the U.S.-Mexico border, it doesn’t begin there. Really, people are coming from the south. So, we need to have a hemispheric regional perspective to include Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, Venezuela, Haiti, Honduras, Guatemala, Costa Rica. And that is why our president is assuming great leadership in this regard. … We can take control these migratory flows, offer development opportunities, and approve safe and legal pathways. This is essential because we have had a crisis that affected us at our trade crossings as well. So, we need to be very well prepared for this.
Mexico’s plan to create an alliance with Venezuela may also allow Mexico to help U.S. officials implement their new plan to deport some illegal-migrant Venezuelans. The U.S. plan was announced Thursday, but U.S. officials released no details about numbers or timing — perhaps because Mexico has yet to declare the price it will charge to aid the deportations.
Meanwhile, Obrador plays hardball with Biden.
On Thursday, he slammed Biden’s surprise campaign trail decision to build about 17 miles of extra border wall. It is a “step backward,” Obrador complained as he argued that “the poorest countries have to be helped” by migration.
Biden’s officials and their business donors are very eager to get more migrants from Obrador — but only if the huge inflow can be kept orderly and hidden from U.S. voters who are increasingly opposed to both illegal and legal migration.
Biden’s deputies also want to pretend the migrant flood is caused by uncontrollable foreign disasters, not by the Democrat party’s open-border offer of jobs, housing, and government aid to foreign migrants.
“Our two countries are being challenged by an unprecedented level of migration throughout our hemisphere,” Mayorkas told the meeting, adding:
The United States is committed to continuing to work closely with Mexico as we implement a model that pairs a historic expansion of safe, orderly and lawful pathways for migrants to come directly to the United States or elsewhere to obtain humanitarian relief outside the grip of [cartel] smugglers.
In January 2023, the Cuban-born, pro-migration border chief rebuffed Republican demands for an effective anti-drug policy. “We are doing that which needs to be done,” Mayorkas answered.
Since January, at least 50,000 mostly discarded Americans have died from fentanyl as employers open many low-wage jobs for the indebted migrants that are being extracted from poor countries:
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