Republican who backed bipartisan border bill warns of 'loopholes' despite record-low border encounters

Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., told Fox News Digital he still believes the bipartisan border bill was necessary to secure the border.


Republican who backed bipartisan border bill warns of 'loopholes' despite record-low border encounters
1.1 k views

"Same law, same opportunities. Obviously, very different applications of the law," Lankford said. "We had one day last week, there were less than 200 people [who] even tried to illegally cross the border. You go back to a year and a half ago, that number was 12,000 a day. So dramatic difference in application."

"We had a million additional people that came into the country in 2024 that would not have been in the country, if we would have passed that bill," Lankford said. 

Lankford, who led the Republican charge to pass the bipartisan border bill, said it would have required the Biden administration to exercise their "legal authority" and create new authorities to secure the border. And even with the record-low number of border crossings, Lankford told Fox News Digital that border security requires legislative action to make a lasting impact. 

"It'll be the challenge in the days ahead. There are still gaps in the law. There are still loopholes there. And I would anticipate within two or three years the cartels will test it, test it, test it, test it. See if they can find a way to make a breakthrough. We saw this in the first Trump administration. The first two years, the numbers were down. But in 2019, there were almost a million people that illegally crossed that year under the Trump administration in the third year, because the cartels were testing, testing, testing, trying to find loopholes in the law… that challenge will come again," Lankford said. 

Lankford said the first step was Trump applying the law by enforcing border security, and next is closing legislative "loopholes."

"When we see the loopholes, close those because President Trump's going to be president for four years. We don't know who's to be president five years from now. We're going to have the same issue again. If we don't fix those gaps in the law, then we're going to have this issue come up again. So if you want to fix it, it's not just elect somebody for four years. It's fix the law, so we never have to deal with this again. That's what I was trying to do, was to be able to stop the chaos that was already happening in 2014, and then to say no matter who is president in the future, we're going to enforce this law," Lankford said. 

Lankford has supported border security legislation since he was a representative for Oklahoma's fifth congressional district. He supported the Secure the Southwest Border Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2014, which was designed to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to enhance resources for unaccompanied minors on the southern border. 

As senator, Lankford was the lead Republican negotiator on the Border Act of 2024, more commonly known as the bipartisan border bill. Lankford collaborated with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., and Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., to introduce the legislation early last year. 

The bill sought to deter illegal border crossings through a quota system, tighten asylum application processes, increase border patrol agents on the ground, create work visas for migrant spouses of U.S. citizens and develop pathways to citizenship for "documented dreamers."

The bill became a political fixture of the 2024 presidential campaign, as Democrats up and down the ballot blamed Trump and Republicans for blocking legislation that would have increased border security. Meanwhile, Republicans blamed President Joe Biden's policies for the illegal immigration surge.

A new report by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) found there were more than 18 million illegal immigrants in the United States following the Biden administration. The population of illegal immigrants in the United States grew by 4.1 million or 18.2% since December 2020, the report found. 

On the campaign trail, Trump vowed to secure the border on day one of his administration. He signed a series of border security executive actions on the first day of his second term, including declaring a national emergency on the southern border. 

you may also like

Birth tourism industry thrives in Miami as Supreme Court showdown gets underway
  • by foxnews
  • descember 09, 2016
Birth tourism industry thrives in Miami as Supreme Court showdown gets underway

Birth tourism is a booming concierge industry as Trump's Executive Order 14160 on birthright citizenship faces a Supreme Court challenge in a major case.

read more