Tools
Change country:

Would Kamala Harris be a pro-immigrant president?

Kamala Harris sits at a desk beside a monitor showing the president of Mexico at his desk.
US Vice President Kamala Harris conducts a bilateral meeting with Mexico President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador via video link from her Ceremonial Office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on May 7, 2021 in Washington, DC. Harris is heading the White House’s efforts to partner with Mexico and other Northern Triangle countries to work on the current migration crisis. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

It wasn’t long ago that Democrats embraced an unequivocally pro-immigrant stance.

The party once defined its immigration platform in opposition to the policies of former President Donald Trump’s first term: separating families detained at the border, a travel ban on Muslim-majority countries, and efforts to gut the asylum system among them. In 2020, President Joe Biden ran on a message of undoing the cruelties of his predecessor, and in his first week in office, he signed a flurry of executive actions doing just that.

Much has changed in the four years since. In the final weeks of the 2024 campaign, the rhetoric coming from Kamala Harris and most Democrats is decidedly different. There’s a greater focus on border security and less emphasis on immigrants’ rights and contributions to the country. 

This pivot didn’t come from nowhere. Border crossings reached record highs at the end of 2023, fueling a Republican narrative of chaos that Americans appear to have embraced. Though crossings have come down significantly throughout 2024, more Americans still want to see immigration levels decrease than at any point since the early 2000s, just after the 9/11 terror attacks. Polls show most voters support stricter border security measures; a growing share wants mass deportations.

This is the political reality Democrats have had to confront ahead of the presidential election: Broadly, Americans hold anti-immigration views. It doesn’t really matter that Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee, was known as a champion for immigrant rights in the Senate and during her 2020 presidential bid. In a race against Trump, who has upped the ante on his dehumanizing rhetoric about immigrants in the final stretch of the campaign, she can’t afford to look weak on the border if she wants to win. That’s especially true given immigration is an issue that has only become more salient among the independent voters she’s courting in key states.

“Before you can fix a policy, first you must get elected,” said Chuck Rocha, a Democratic strategist and former senior adviser on Sen. Bernie Sanders’s 2020 presidential campaign who designed Sanders’s Latino vote outreach strategy. “[Republicans] have bullied Democrats for years on this issue, and I think it smart for the Harris campaign to not back down and take them on.”

Assuming Harris wins, what’s next for Democrats and liberals on immigration? The progressive left that was once so vocally pro-immigration has largely supported Harris despite her sprint to the center. That’s because progressives know full well that a Trump administration would be worse. But if Trump and his xenophobic agenda are defeated, that could make room for a leftist offensive on immigration. What would that look like, and will we see it during a Harris administration?

How a new politics of immigration emerged

Democrats’ 2020 platform didn’t even mention border security. Instead, it focused on expanding legal immigration pathways and rolling back the US’s immigration detention regime. Four years after former President Barack Obama was dubbed the “deporter in chief,” it seemed as though Trump had pushed Democrats to embrace a newfound moral case for increasing immigration.

But amid a challenging new reality on the border and resulting political pressure, Biden advanced immigration policies that his Republican predecessor devised himself or would have at least approved of:

  • He kept Trump’s Title 42 policy in place for more than two years, allowing him to turn away swaths of immigrants at the border under the guise of protecting public health during the Covid-19 pandemic, despite the fact that public health experts saw no evidence that it was an effective means of curbing the virus.
  • He instituted his version of Trump’s asylum transit ban. That rule allows immigration enforcement officials to turn away migrants for a number of reasons: if they do not have valid travel and identification documents, if they’ve traveled through another country without applying for asylum, if they don’t show up at a port of entry at an appointed time, and more.
  • He issued a proclamation barring asylum seekers who cross the border without permission from applying for protections in the US when migrant crossings exceed a daily average of 2,500 in a week.

Harris played a role in executing this strategy, and immigration was part of her portfolio as vice president from the early months of Biden’s presidency. She was tasked with addressing the root causes of migration in a diplomatic role that primarily involved directing private-sector investment to Central America. 

During a visit to Guatemala in June 2021, she delivered a controversial message to migrants: “Don’t come” to the US. When border crossings later spiked, she came under fire from Republicans as Biden’s failed “border czar,” a frame that the Biden administration sought to rebut. 

In February, Biden tried to make concrete progress on immigration by endorsing a bipartisan bill that included border security measures that Democrats wouldn’t have dreamed of supporting a few years prior, including a new authority to quickly expel migrants arriving on the southern border at times of high demand. In exchange, Democrats would have gotten something they wanted: closing gaps in the legal immigration system that have left everyone from the children of high-skilled foreign workers to Afghan refugees in limbo. 

At first, Republicans coalesced around the bill and it seemed as though it would pass — that is, until Trump began to lobby against it, reportedly stating he wanted to keep the border a live issue in the presidential election. 

To be sure, Biden’s approach hasn’t been entirely focused on border security. It’s worth noting that Biden has also advanced one of the biggest efforts in over a decade to legalize undocumented immigrants. Under the new program, which is now on hold due to a legal challenge, approximately 500,000 spouses of US citizens and 50,000 of their stepchildren could be eligible to apply for permanent residence and get a green card without having to leave the US.

But such moves are the exception. The Biden era has generally seen Democrats move closer to Trump on immigration rather than further away. As the Democratic nominee, Harris has had to navigate that new normal.

What would a Harris presidency mean for the politics of immigration?

Democrats outlined their immigration platform before Biden decided not to seek reelection, but Harris still needs to detail how she would approach the issue. 

She has indicated in public appearances that her strategy will be two-pronged, focused on securing the border and developing earned pathways to citizenship, including for Dreamers in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which provides legal protections to migrants who came to the US without authorization as children. 

She has repeatedly argued that Trump is simultaneously not tough enough and not compassionate enough on immigration, whereas she seems intent on presenting herself as striking that balance. 

That’s been clear in her rhetoric, but what exactly that balance looks like in practice promises to be the subject of an intra-movement struggle, one that pits pro-immigrant activists against the party’s relative border hawks.

Harris’s rhetoric during the campaign has suggested a tougher-on-immigration approach.

 For instance, when speaking at her only debate with Trump about the border bill that Democrats tried to pass in February, she cast the failed bill — and Trump’s advocacy against it — as evidence that the former president isn’t serious about finding a way to improve the situation at the US-Mexico border: “He preferred to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem,” Harris said.

During a Univision town hall earlier this month, Harris again criticized Trump for tanking the bill. However, this time, it was in response to a question from a voter whose mother died before she could become a US citizen. Harris argued that the bill could have created “a comprehensive earned pathway to citizenship for hard-working people” like the voter’s mother. 

That’s not an entirely accurate portrayal of the bill. It would have expanded existing pathways to citizenship with the addition of 250,000 family- and employment-based visas and opened up a path to permanent status for Afghans who came to the US after American forces withdrew from Afghanistan, but it was hardly comprehensive in its approach. 

Still, the interaction showed Harris trying to soften her tone, if not the border policies she supports.

“Depending on what venue she’s talking in, she frames the immigration issue a bit differently,” said Douglas Rivlin, a spokesperson for the immigrant advocacy group America’s Voice. “On Univision, her humanity came through in a way.”

Some progressives, however, see reason to believe that Harris would be more pro-immigrant as a president than she has been as a campaigner.

Rocha noted that the Harris campaign has hired immigrant activists, including Alida Garcia, who led immigration advocacy at the immigration and criminal justice reform advocacy group FWD.us, and Julie Chávez Rodriguez, the granddaughter of Latino civil rights activist and labor leader César Chávez. And that could suggest that her campaign is thinking about how to advance a pro-immigrant agenda within the current political environment.

Progressives also seem to believe that while they may not endorse all of Harris’s immigration policies, they can still find ways to work together, as they used to when she was a senator. 

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA), chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, recounted that Harris co-sponsored the first bill she ever introduced, a response to Trump’s travel ban. It sought to ensure that people had access to legal counsel in detention when they first arrived in the US.

“She cares about the dignity and humanity of people who come to this country,” Jayapal told Vox. “While I have disagreed with some of the immigration positions she has taken, I know that she will be a partner with us on this issue, rather than use immigrants as a political football the way Republicans and Donald Trump have.”

Jayapal’s comments are a reminder of why the pro-immigrant left has given Harris scope to operate against Trump, whose rhetoric about immigrants, from his debunked comments about Haitians eating pets to his claims that immigrants are “poisoning the blood” of America, has recently reached a new low. But the question is whether — and for how long — progressives’ goodwill toward Harris will last if Trump is defeated.

Concretely, immigration battles under a Harris administration would likely play out on some of the same issues where the left criticized Biden, including his restrictions on asylum seekers at the border and the February border bill that Harris has held up as a model for Democrats going forward. Activists still want many of the same reforms Harris supported in 2020, such as swapping out deterrence-based policies for policies expanding safe pathways to come to the US and improving access to asylum.

However, the impulses that drive support for Trump’s immigration policies aren’t likely to just fade away, even if the man himself recedes from public life. So, a President Harris would likely still face demand from the American public to prioritize border security. That may not leave much room for her to adopt the mantle of the left’s priorities on immigration. 

Advocates seem to acknowledge that reality as well as the practical challenges of passing immigration reform in a divided Congress or issuing executive actions on immigration that could be challenged in court.

“The American people are pretty clear about what they want to have happen on immigration. They want the balanced approach that Harris and the Democrats are for,” Rivlin said. 

Advocates are holding out hope that Harris can use her bully pulpit to change the tone of the conversation about immigration in America, as she started to do at the Univision town hall. In Rivlin’s view, “That’s one of the most important things that needs to happen on immigration.”


Read full article on: vox.com
King Charles III's visit rekindles Australia's debate on ending ties to the British monarchy
King Charles III and Queen Camilla have arrived in Sydney on the first Australian visit by a reigning monarch in more than a decade.
8 m
latimes.com
The Problematics: Bob Guccione’s ‘Caligula’ Is An Unholy Cinematic Orgy — Even Without The Porn
Is it worth watching? Of course it is.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris’ skit with ‘SNL’ alum Molly Shannon at Al Smith dinner
At this year’s Al Smith charity dinner, Vice President Kamala Harris got a little help from Mary Catherine Gallagher. Ahead of a pre-recorded speech, the veep performed a comedy bit alongside Molly Shannon’s ’90s-era Catholic school girl character from “Saturday Night Live.” Watch the full video here. 
nypost.com
South Korean intelligence says North has sent troops to aid Russia's war in Ukraine
South Korea’s spy agency says North Korea has dispatched troops to support Russia’s war against Ukraine.
latimes.com
Yankees vs. Guardians Game 4 prediction: ALCS odds, picks, best bets Friday
Game 4 is priced closely in the betting markets as a pair of starters who have not pitched in several weeks will make their first postseason starts.
nypost.com
Introducing Atlantic Labs: Research and Experiments from The Atlantic’s Product Team
Today The Atlantic is launching Atlantic Labs, a research and development site from the product and technology team. The product team will use this space to incubate ideas, many using AI, to understand how The Atlantic can benefit from emerging technologies. This is a destination for works in progress and prototypes, and to test––and learn from––new technologies.There are three projects on the site at launch: Atlantic Companion, a chatbot with access to The Atlantic’s 167-year archive, that delivers a list of relevant articles when given a prompt; Atlantic Take, a Chrome extension designed to surface related Atlantic stories wherever you’re browsing on the internet; and Atlantic Explorer, a guided journey through thematic articles. With time and testing, these projects may help the product team improve existing features or develop new tools to benefit our staff and readers. (Atlantic Labs is independent from our journalism, and does not involve our editorial team; additionally, while these projects use gen-AI, AI is not being used to create The Atlantic’s journalism.) Projects from Atlantic Labs In working with emerging technologies, things may occasionally glitch or break––and, in the process, teach us something new. Labs was developed as a stand-alone site so that it can be an experimental sandbox––a place to incubate ideas without directly affecting the places where people normally read and listen to The Atlantic.Atlantic Labs is open to anyone, with registration required. Press with questions may reach out to Anna Bross, SVP of communications for The Atlantic, at press@theatlantic.com.
theatlantic.com
Get to know the range of chile flakes with these 5 varieties
Explore piment d’Espelette, gochugaru, Aleppo, crushed red pepper flakes and Urfa biber and how to use them in your kitchen.
washingtonpost.com
Anna Camp Reveals How ‘True Blood’ Prepared Her For Her Role In ‘Hysteria’
The star also opened up about her Hysteria wig and playing a character with an "inner conflict."
nypost.com
‘Monsters’ star Cooper Koch explains why he wears a wedding ring despite not being married
The breakout star's gold band has been a staple accessory since he attended the 2024 Emmy Awards in September to support his twin brother, TV editor Payton.
nypost.com
Biden says Western allies must keep aiding Ukraine as he meets European partners before election
President Biden, meeting with European partners in Berlin, says Ukraine's Western allies must “sustain our resolve” in aiding its fight against Russia's invasion.
latimes.com
Texas AG Ken Paxton sues pediatrician over gender-affirming care for youths
The Republican attorney general said the lawsuit marked the beginning of his enforcement of Texas’ Senate Bill 14, which bans gender-affirming care for minors.
washingtonpost.com
Donald Trump roasts Kamala Harris for skipping Al Smith dinner
At this year’s Al Smith dinner in New York City, former President Donald Trump called out Vice President Kamala Harris for not being there in person for the Catholic charity event. “You got to go to the dinner. Otherwise bad things are going to happen from up there,” Trump joked, pointing up to the heavens....
nypost.com
Sydney Opera House gives royal welcome to King and Queen with spectacular photo montage
A photo montage of England’s King Charles III and Queen Camilla was illuminated onto the Sydney Opera House sails to mark their arrival on Oct. 18. The royal couple are embarking on a six-day visit in Australia, the first visit by a reigning monarch since 2011.
nypost.com
Tesla Self-Driving System Will Be Investigated by Safety Agency
The National Highway Transportation Safety Administration said it was looking into what Elon Musk’s electric car company called the full self-driving system.
nytimes.com
Jay Cutler arrested for DUI and gun possession in Tennessee
The "Very Cavallari" alum was also charged with exercise due care and violation of implied consent law on Thursday evening in Franklin, Tenn.
nypost.com
DAVID MARCUS: Kamala Harris can no longer hide from her dangerous stance on men playing in girls' sports
Columnist David Marcus says Kamala Harris' long-held position backing boys who claim they are girls competing in female sports is a loser with the American people. But she's locked in, and can't change her stance.
foxnews.com
Fears of sectarian tensions rise in Lebanon as Israel expands strikes
As Israel expands its strikes far from Hezbollah’s bastions into areas where displaced Shiites have fled, fears rise about worsening sectarian tensions.
latimes.com
Stay toasty with these 8 bedding picks that will keep you warm all winter long
Layer your bed with these soft, heavy-weight blankets and keep warm the entire night.
foxnews.com
Denise Richards says losing out on lead role of ‘90s cult classic was a ‘blessing’
Denise Richards said it may have been a "blessing" that she didn't get the lead in 1995's "Showgirls," which was widely panned after its release.
foxnews.com
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar killed: What it means for the conflict in Gaza
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, who has been a prime target for Israel, was killed in Gaza. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called it "the beginning of the end," but stated that Israel's military mission is not yet complete.
cbsnews.com
Sharon Osbourne blames the music industry for Liam Payne’s death: ‘We all let you down’
"You were just a kid when you entered one of the toughest industries in the world. Who was in your corner?" Osbourne wrote on Instagram Thursday.
nypost.com
Eye Opener: Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar killed in Gaza
The IDF confirmed that Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar has been killed. Meanwhile, CBS News' Margaret Brennan sits down with Paul Whelan for his first interview since being freed from a Russian prison. All that and all that matters in today's Eye Opener.
cbsnews.com
Saints’ bizarre timeout in ‘TNF’ loss to Broncos completely baffles Al Michaels
Al Michaels had no use for the Saints' first-half foolishness Thursday night.
nypost.com
IDF drone shows Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar just moments before he was killed
An Israeli drone captured Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar’s last minutes alive — as the Oct. 7 mastermind tossed a piece of wood in a futile attempt to take out the device before he was killed, officials said. Sinwar’s death has been hailed by US and Israeli officials as a major blow to Hamas with the...
nypost.com
Elon Musk's messy breakup with California rages on
California helped Elon Musk achieve tycoon status. How’d their relationship get so bad?
latimes.com
Will There Be A ‘Lincoln Lawyer’ Season 4 On Netflix?
Don't leave us hanging, Netflix.
nypost.com
Paul Whelan says Brittney Griner was "a great help" in advocating for his freedom from Russia
Paul Whelan reflects on how WNBA star Brittney Griner helped lend support and advocated for his freedom after he was left behind in a one-for-one prisoner swap between the U.S. and Russia in December 2022. Griner returned home after spending nearly 10 months in Russian custody for drug charges
cbsnews.com
Liam Payne’s final moments with fans in Buenos Aires, Argentina
New footage has emerged showing Liam Payne greeting fans in Buenos Aires, Argentina, before his untimely death on Oct. 16. The late singer, 31, appeared to be in good spirits while signing an autographs for an adoring fans who told him, “Te amo,” or “I love you” in Spanish. In another clip, the One Director...
nypost.com
Mets vs. Dodgers prediction: NLCS Game 5 odds, pick, best bet
The Post makes their prediction for Game 5 of the NLCS as the Mets look to avoid elimination against the Dodgers.
nypost.com
Trump says RFK Jr. will be in his admin if he wins election: ‘He had a big impact’
Former President Donald Trump revealed Friday that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will have a job within his administration if the Republican candidate takes back the White House.
nypost.com
Comedian Jim Gaffigan’s scorching takedown of Dems at Al Smith dinner goes viral: ‘Murder of an entire political party’
Jim Gaffigan repeatedly took shots at Vice President Kamala Harris and fellow Democrats during Thursday night's glitzy event in Manhattan after she opted to skip the Catholic charity bash.
1 h
nypost.com
Liam Payne’s ex Aliana Mawla mourns One Direction singer after his death at 31: ‘Will forever love and miss you’
Liam Payne's ex-girlfriend, Alina Mawla, shared: “I’m sorry this happened to you. Will forever love and miss you."
1 h
nypost.com
D.C. United, eyeing a playoff future, starts by remembering its past
D.C. United, which was not expected to compete for a playoff spot this year, will enter Its regular season finale against Charlotte FC on Saturday stocked with motivation.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
The True Story of the Dating Game Serial Killer in Woman of the Hour
Anna Kendrick's directorial debut dramatizes the story of Rodney Alcala, who appeared on 'The Dating Game' in the midst of a killing spree.
1 h
time.com
Video captures water tank falling on woman — but she miraculously escapes injury
A woman has escaped injury in Surat, India, after a water tank fell from a roof and landed perfectly around her, a viral video shows.
1 h
foxnews.com
Paulson Adebo breaks femur in blowout ‘TNF’ loss to Broncos as Saints’ injury woes continue
The 25-year-old Adebo sustained the injury in the second quarter when trying to make a tackle.
1 h
nypost.com
Chiefs president admits he doesn't necessarily agree with Harrison Butker's political views
Kansas City Chiefs president Mark Donovan said Thursday he didn't "necessarily agree" with Harrison Butker's commencement speech from earlier this year.
1 h
foxnews.com
In blending past and present, the Commanders aren’t afraid to ‘Raise Hail’
After the name change, the Washington Commanders struggled to build an identity. It’s beginning to take shape under new ownership.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Donnie Wahlberg Shares TMI Confession About His “Large Balls” On ‘WWHL’
"Big ball energy."
1 h
nypost.com
I Grew Up on Brighton Beach. Anora Helped Me See My Neighborhood Differently
Sean Baker's new movie views the south Brooklyn Russian immigrant neighborhood through a tender lens.
1 h
time.com
Why are there still curtains on airplanes?
There's plenty of features on a plane that might have people wondering what exactly they're for.
1 h
nypost.com
Helene 'like a bomb went off': Florida Rep Kat Cammack details severe hurricane damage
Florida Rep. Kat Cammack said that her district has suffered significant damage from Hurricane Helene, including "astronomical" agricultural damage and more.
1 h
foxnews.com
Teen surfer mauled by shark in Florida: ‘I could have lost my arm’
"I could have lost my arm," Teddy Wittemann, 16, said. "The first thoughts were, ‘Am I going to be able to surf contests again?’" Teddy Wittemann, 16, went to grab his surfboard during a surf sesh in Melbourne Beach when the shark took hold of his left arm.
1 h
nypost.com
Person fatally ran over on beach in Santa Monica; driver taken into custody
About 11:30 p.m. Thursday, first responders rushed onto the sand near a Cirque du Soleil Kooza set up on the beach to try and free a person trapped under a silver SUV, according to KABC.
1 h
latimes.com
Tom Ford’s $255 perfume compared to embalming fluid: ‘Sinister’
You'll die at the smell of this perfume.
1 h
nypost.com
Lisa Ann Walter teases ‘Abbott Elementary’ and ‘It’s Always Sunny’ crossover: ‘Unhinged’
“I can't wait to get up in the morning and go to work because I know I'm going to have such a good time because I know everybody is firing on all cylinders,” the actress gushed.
1 h
nypost.com
Trump takes a scattershot approach to income-tax reform
Conservatives expect a second Trump administration to try a major overhaul of the tax system. But the former president largely just keeps proposing new exemptions.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
How the Uluburun shipwreck was discovered accidentally by a sponge diver
The Uluburun shipwreck was accidently discovered by a sponge diver in 1982. Following the discovery, excavation of the area took archaeologists a decade to complete.
1 h
foxnews.com