Still, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas cautioned that it’s “too early” to tell if the migrant surge has peaked since the expiration of Title 42.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said Sunday that the U.S. has experienced a 50% decrease in the number of encounters along its southern border since Covid restrictions were lifted last week.
“Over the past two days, the United States Border Patrol has experienced a 50% drop in the number of encounters versus what we were experiencing earlier in the week before Title 42 ended at midnight on Thursday,” Mayorkas said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”
Still, he cautioned that it’s “too early” to tell if the migrant surge has peaked.
“It is still early. We are in day three, but we have been planning for this transition for months and months. And we have been executing on our plan. And we will continue to do so,” Mayorkas said. “It is too early. But the numbers that we have experienced over the past two days are markedly down over what they were prior to the end of Title 42.”
The Covid border restrictions, known as Title 42, were first implemented by the Trump administration in 2020 and continued into the Biden administration until they expired late Thursday. The restriction allowed both administrations to expedite the expulsion of migrants without asylum hearings.
In recent years, the Biden administration had tried three times to lift the restrictions earlier. But those attempts were thwarted by legal challenges from Republicans, who argued that lifting Title 42 would increase the flow migrants and put a strain on the immigration system as well as pose national security risks.
In the weeks leading up to the lifting of Title 42, the Biden administration braced for what was widely expected to be a record surge in migration across the U.S.-Mexico border.
Mayorkas said Sunday that Border Patrol saw approximately 6,300 encounters along the border last Friday and about 4,200 on Saturday — a significant reduction compared to the number of undocumented migrant crossings that were stopped before Title 42 ended.
On Saturday, two DHS officials also indicated that daily migrant crossings had roughly halved since the pandemic restrictions ended. There were roughly 11,000 on Tuesday and Wednesday, and 10,000 on Thursday, the officials told NBC News.
Prior to the lifting of Title 42, some Democrats expressed skepticism on whether the administration was prepared for a potential uptick of asylum-seekers.
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., on Sunday said that Title 42 was required to be lifted by law since the pandemic is over: “The president doesn’t have discretion to keep Title 42 in place.”
In an interview on NBC News’ “Meet the Press,” Murphy also defended Biden’s handling of the border issue and criticized Republicans who had complained that the president did not do enough to manage it.
“The only Covid restriction Republicans seem to want to keep in place is the one that keeps people that don’t look like them from coming into the United States,” Murphy said.
Mayorkas last month called for congressional support to fix the “broken immigration system” in the U.S. ahead of the lifting of Title 42, demanding legislative reform to assist the administration’s efforts to secure the border.
“We need resources for it all. Remember, the resources will enable us to move more quickly, more efficiently within a broken immigration system,” he said.
The House passed a GOP-backed bill to address immigration at the U.S.-Mexico border last week, the same day Covid restrictions at the border were lifted.
The legislation, known as the Secure the Border Act of 2023, would mandate that Customs and Border Protection hire enough Border Patrol agents to maintain a staff of 22,000 and develop a plan to upgrade existing technology to make sure agents are well-equipped. It also would require the Homeland Security secretary to resume construction of the border wall, a centerpiece of former President Donald Trump’s administration.
But the bill is unlikely to become law. Democrats, who oppose it, hold a slim majority in the Senate, and the White House issued a veto threat this month.
Democrats argued that it would go beyond the scope of border security and punish all noncitizens, including legal residents, trafficking victims and refugees.