Rocksolid Light

Welcome to novaBBS (click a section below)

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

Human kind cannot bear very much reality. -- T. S. Eliot, "Four Quartets: Burnt Norton"


interests / nyc.politics / Re: Finger-pointing and frustration over migrant crisis leads to a total breakdown between White House and NYC sanctuary city mayor

SubjectAuthor
o Re: Finger-pointing and frustration over migrant crisis leads to a total breakdobyte detective

1
Re: Finger-pointing and frustration over migrant crisis leads to a total breakdown between White House and NYC sanctuary city mayor

<uer6t8$uka$1@toxic.dizum.net>

  copy mid

https://novabbs.com/interests/article-flat.php?id=1545&group=nyc.politics#1545

  copy link   Newsgroups: misc.immigration.usa nyc.politics alt.politics.democrats alt.fan.rush-limbaugh talk.politics.guns sac.politics
Path: i2pn2.org!rocksolid2!news.neodome.net!news.mixmin.net!sewer!.POSTED.localhost!not-for-mail
From: pos...@bosley.biz (byte detective)
Newsgroups: misc.immigration.usa,nyc.politics,alt.politics.democrats,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,talk.politics.guns,sac.politics
Subject: Re: Finger-pointing and frustration over migrant crisis leads to a total breakdown between White House and NYC sanctuary city mayor
Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2023 05:47:20 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: dizum.com - The Internet Problem Provider
Message-ID: <uer6t8$uka$1@toxic.dizum.net>
References: <u5poqb$1457f$1@dont-email.me>
Injection-Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2023 05:47:20 -0000 (UTC)
Injection-Info: toxic.dizum.net; posting-host="localhost:127.0.0.1";
logging-data="31370"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@dizum.net"
User-Agent: ForteAgent/8.00
 by: byte detective - Mon, 25 Sep 2023 05:47 UTC

On 07 Jun 2023, "RKBA Stand Yer Ground & Shoot!"
<nowomr@protonmail.com> posted some news:u5poqb$1457f$1@dont-email.me:

> But you said you were a sanctuary city. That means you don't get any
> federal mnoney and all illegal criminals are welcome.

The relationship between President Joe Biden�s White House and Eric
Adams began breaking down in private months earlier than previously
known � and long before the New York mayor started publicly blasting the
president over the migrant crisis in his city.

�There�s no leadership here,� Adams told a group of Biden aides last
October in the chief of staff�s office, demanding the president do more
to help his city handle a massive influx of migrants.

The issue is one of the most sensitive issues for the White House, and
for Biden�s reelection campaign. Intergovernmental affairs director
Julie Ch�vez Rodr�guez, chief of staff Ron Klain and Homeland Security
Adviser Liz Sherwood-Randall bristled. They were doing everything they
could at the White House to lead without Congress pitching in, they
said. Biden had done more than any previous president and much of what
Adams was asking for would either require congressional action or would
likely immediately be challenged in court.

It was a moment, which is being reported now for the first time, that
prefaced a total breakdown of the relationship between the White House
and the mayor�s office. CNN�s conversations with multiple sources
revealed the political partnership has devolved into finger-pointing and
frustration between Adams, the president, their aides and advocates who
complain that the leaders have both been blundering through a response
to a crisis that more than one told CNN feels like �playing hot potato
with people.�

A year later, Adams has long moved past private bashing of Biden, even
headlining a rally on Thursday in Manhattan that slammed the
administration�s response arrival of migrants. Beyond the sniping is a
creeping fear among White House and New York officials that the failure
to find solutions and tamp down concerns won�t just leave thousands of
migrants in limbo but could blow up into a major political problem for
Democrats heading into 2024, the sources told CNN.

While other cities have been seeing a growing number of migrant
arrivals, New York City has become the epicenter of the crisis, after
the number of newly arrived asylum seekers since spring 2022 surpassed
100,000 last month with costs projected to run up to $12 billion in the
coming years as people line up in search of housing and other basic
services.

There are efforts to bridge the divide. Tom Perez, who took over from
Ch�vez Rodr�guez � now Biden�s reelection campaign manager � as director
of the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, recently spent
time in New York to try to smooth over tensions over the migrant crisis
and coordinate with state and city partners, according to multiple
sources.

Natalie Quillian, a deputy White House chief of staff, has also been
involved in coordinating federal efforts to address New York�s concerns,
but even that has been a source of tension, with Adams feeling fobbed
off after having a regular line of communication and several White House
meetings with Klain.

�The mayor has every right to be aggrieved,� said New York Rep. Ritchie
Torres, a Democrat from the Bronx. �It is fundamentally unfair for the
failure of the immigration system to fall disproportionately on the
shoulders of a single city. It�s hardly in the president�s interest to
stand by while the migrant crisis rages on and Republicans weaponize
it.�

In City Hall, they complain that they�re not just bearing the brunt now,
but that the costs will eat away at the rest of the agenda that Adams
had been hoping to pursue in a city still struggling to come back from
the pandemic. And the only reason anyone is paying attention, he and
those around him believe, is because he has used his platform to make as
much noise as he can, demanding that the federal government take care of
a situation that only exists because it was the federal government that
let these people into the country.

�The White House has made the conscious decision that it�s better
politics to let New York suffer than to actually try to fix the
problem,� said one person close to Adams. �The city is being left to
deal with this colossal problem itself.�

They�ll work it out, stressed campaign spokesman Kevin Munoz.

�President Biden counts Mayor Adams as a friend and partner,� Munoz told
CNN. �He looks forward to working with the mayor on issues impacting New
Yorkers, and to win the White House again in 2024.�

A problem for Empire State Democrats
Biden and Adams are a long way from the president pulling off half of
his peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich and offering it to the mayor as
they sat next to each other in the back of the presidential limo in
February 2022, riding around New York City together, in Biden�s early
embrace of the new mayor as the kind of pragmatic leader Democrats
needed in their next generation. Neither has even picked up a phone to
call in over a year.

While Biden advisers argue that the voters they need in battleground
states will not be thinking about what the mayor of New York City has to
say in deciding who they will support for president, New York Democrats
� still bruised from the 2022 races � are not so sure.

They worry Adams will end up feeding and validating right wing talking
points just like they say he did in 2022 when talking up how dangerous
crime had made his city, with an impact that could run from the
presidential race down to the New York House races that Democrats need
to win to take back the majority.

It�s not just the images of the migrants on the streets that could prove
disastrous politically, they say. It�s the Republicans already making an
issue of the local and federal government spending on assisting
migrants.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, whom sources tell CNN has been trying to
thread demands for a more robust response and being a Democratic team
player who�s not as critical of Biden, has been left trying to be the
mediator.

She went to Washington for a two-and-a-half hour meeting with White
House chief of staff Jeff Zients on Wednesday and ended up extracting
more commitments than she had expected, including taking steps to ensure
migrants who are eligible to apply for a work permit in New York City
are encouraged to do so and pledging support from federal agencies.
Biden was down the hall in the Oval Office meeting with Vermont Sen.
Bernie Sanders, but didn�t stop by.

While others are also trying to cool tensions � �The drama is
unfortunate and really needs to end,� said New York Rep. Jamaal Bowman,
a Democrat � multiple members of the congressional delegation who have
rarely been Adams allies warn that they are likely to soon join him in
hammering the administration more publicly.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem
Jeffries, both from New York, have been among those pushing for more
help and frustrated that they are not getting it.

But sympathetic as many are to the humanitarian crisis in New York, a
wide range of advocates and officials accuse Adams of grandstanding.

Regina Romero, the mayor of Tucson, Arizona, told CNN that she was among
the mayors who spoke up against Adams during another private meeting
with White House officials in Washington earlier this year.

�The Biden administration has been listening to the needs of my city and
other mayors along the border and working very, very closely to help
us,� Romero said. �Instead of laying blame on the Biden-Harris
administration, I would be more than happy to hold hands with Mayor
Adams and really direct our concerns and the concerns of millions in
this country and go to Congress and say, �It�s time for you to act
now.��

White House on defense
Since Biden took office, his administration has grappled with record
migrant arrivals at the US southern border. While administration
officials avoided a border crisis over the summer, US cities have
continued to grapple with the arrival of asylum seekers.

�The reaction of Democratic mayors and governors earlier this year is
part of what got the White House�s attention and got them more engaged
in trying to get a more orderly system at the border,� one source close
to the White House said. �It�s one thing when the attacks are coming
from the other side. It�s different when it�s your own team that�s
questioning what you�re doing.�

Central to what Adams is asking for is expediting work authorizations,
so that people who are already in New York City would be able to get
legal jobs and wouldn�t be forced to rely on the social safety net.

But the process for applying for asylum and a work permit is based on
current immigration laws, which require a 150-day waiting period to
apply for work authorization and an additional 30 days to be eligible
for approval � and in recent years, it�s made more difficult because of
an immense backlog.

Immigrant advocates argue that the Biden administration should expand
the number of Venezuelans � who make up many of the migrant arrivals in
New York � eligible for a form of humanitarian-relief known as Temporary
Protected Status. That, they say, is perhaps the easiest form of action
� without congressional action � the administration could take to
satisfy the ask from New York. The Homeland Security secretary has
discretion to designate a country for TPS.


Click here to read the complete article
1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.8
clearnet tor