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Biden has a border problem – HotAir


Biden has a border problem
Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona, who in 2020 flipped the seat formerly held by Martha McSally, a Republican, will face voters again in 2022. Immigration could become a powerful wedge issue against him, threatening Democratic control of the Senate. In Texas, which elects a governor in 2022, Latino voters are edging out of the Democratic Party and toward the Republicans. Residents of border areas most directly experience the disruptions of unauthorized immigration. And many Texas Latinos embrace enforcement-minded views on immigration, even if they also empathize with the reasons migrants leave home.
In 2016, Hillary Clinton won the overwhelmingly Latino Rio Grande Valley by massive margins. In 2020, Trump cut that Democratic margin dramatically, and won Zapata County, on the border, south of Nuevo Laredo, outright. The Border Patrol is a major employer in the area; Latinos make up about half of its agents nationally, and even more in the Rio Grande ....

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Biden Has a Problem on the Border - The Atlantic


The Atlantic
A surge of migrants poses a challenge for the president’s policies.
March 16, 2021
GUILLERMO ARIAS / AFP / Getty
The Biden administration has gotten off to a fast start. President Joe Biden has signed a gigantic coronavirus-relief bill into law. Cabinet nominations are being approved by the Senate rapidly, many by lopsided margins. The United States has already returned to the Paris Agreement; green-energy ideas are being drafted into law.
But there is a hole in the hull, and the boat is taking on water. Biden’s people should see the danger. If not, they have certainly had ample warning. In the latest CBS/YouGov poll, 62 percent of respondents approve of the way Biden is handling his job as president, 60 percent of his handling of the economy, and 67 percent of handling of the coronavirus. Only 52 percent, though, approve of the way he is handling immigration yet the Biden administration seems too paralyzed to act. ....

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Coronavirus Texas: 9 months on the pandemic's front line have crushed Texas health care workers' spirits and killed their colleagues


A doctor named Juan Fitz was dying.
Fitz, 67, was Jones common law spouse, she said, and the father of her two young kids. To his co-workers, he was a revered colleague in the emergency department at Lubbock s Covenant Medical Center, where he had worked for roughly two decades.
Fitz had driven himself to the hospital in the early hours of the morning four weeks before, after testing positive for COVID-19. Though his oxygen levels had dropped, he seemed optimistic. He told Jones he d be better soon.
It s going to be five days, Fitz said.
But in mid-October, his texts to her suddenly stopped. Jones video-called Fitz one morning; he looked more scared than she d ever seen him, she recalled. ....

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9 Months On The Pandemic's Front Line Have Crushed Texas Health Care Workers' Spirits And Killed Their Colleagues


9 Months On The Pandemic’s Front Line Have Crushed Texas Health Care Workers’ Spirits And Killed Their Colleagues
Patch
12/11/2020
When Amy Jones burst through the doors of the intensive care unit, she found a line of health care workers in the hallway, she said. Jones was sobbing. Shaking. She let out a scream.
A doctor named Juan Fitz was dying.
Fitz, 67, was Jones’ longtime romantic partner and the father of her two young kids. To his co-workers, he was a revered colleague in the emergency department at Lubbock’s Covenant Medical Center, where he had worked for roughly two decades. ....

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