Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) told CBS News the other day that part of the problem with Donald Trump’s agenda along the U.S./Mexico border is the lack of preparation and forethought. The Republican described the roll out of the president’s “zero tolerance” policy as one that was implemented in a “ready, fire, aim” sort of way.
No matter what one thinks of the administration’s approach, it’s hard to disagree with Corker’s assessment. The White House swore up and down that Trump’s family-separation policy couldn’t be addressed through an executive order, right up until Trump addressed his policy through a carelessly-thrown-together executive order — all while leaving many in the Department of Homeland Security in the dark, and while ignoring the advice of White House Counsel Don McGahn.
Two days later, the Wall Street Journal highlighted the “changing, competing and contradictory explanations of the administration’s immigration policy.” Different agencies within the administration were under the impression that the president’s executive order meant different things and the “slapdash nature of the effort” only intensified the chaos.
At one point late last week, the Washington Post reported that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection was freezing criminal referrals for migrant parents who cross the border illegally with children, only to have the Justice Department say largely the opposite soon after.
All of which led to yesterday. The New York Times reported overnight:
The nation’s top border security official said Monday that his agency has temporarily stopped handing over migrant adults who cross the Mexican border with children for prosecution, undercutting claims by other Trump administration officials that “zero tolerance” for illegal immigration is still in place.
Around the same time, Attorney General Jeff Sessions was in Nevada, where he said federal prosecutions would continue, and White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the White House isn’t changing its policy.
So, what exactly is the administration’s policy?









