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The surge is coming

Six Senate and House Republicans are reportedly expected to meet with amnesty advocates comprised of corporate donors and members of the open border lobby with the intention of “building bipartisanship on immigration reform.”
Joe Biden says he will send a massive amnesty deal for “over 11 million” illegal aliens to the United States Senate within his potential first 100 days in office.
Several GOP Sens. have begun to talk of a potential immigration deal with Biden as Congress has tried and failed in recent years to clinch a deal related to "comprehensive immigration reform," reports The Hill.
Judge Garaufis, a Clinton appointee, ruled over the weekend that the administration’s latest attempt to curb the Obama-era DACA amnesty program was not legally sound as Chad Wolf is illegally serving as the acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security.
Before the election we mentioned polling data that showed Hispanic voters strongly favor (54%) immigration reductions. President Trump's strong showing with Hispanic voters seems to bear this out. Maybe D.C. talking heads will begin to understand voters across the board support immigration policies that put the interest of the American people first.
Andrew R. Arthur, Resident Fellow in Law and Policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, has looked at Joe Biden's immigration agenda and estimates that Biden's promise of amnesty and non-enforcement of immigration law could result in "millions — if not tens of millions — of aliens [who] will remain in and/or enter the United States illegally and stay forever."
A handful of Republican senators has asked the Congressional Budget Office to analyze the cost to American taxpayers of a Democrat plan that provides United States jobs, government handouts, and free health care to illegal aliens.
Pres. Trump named Amy Coney Barrett as his nominee to the Supreme Court to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg. As a federal judge, Barrett has ruled on a couple immigration-related cases.
In a fascinating interview with progressive Matt Yglesias of Vox, conservative broadcaster Glen Beck agreed on the goal of massive increases in the U.S. population. But his creative reasoning was weak, to say the least, and negligently destructive at the most.