The day after addressing the family-separation disaster he created, Donald Trump bragged yesterday, “I signed a very good executive order yesterday.” A report in the Wall Street Journal this morning suggests the president is the only one who’s impressed.
Changing, competing and contradictory explanations of the administration’s immigration policy spread confusion from Washington, D.C., to the Mexican border, leaving front-line law-enforcement and social-service agencies unsure of what will happen to thousands of children. […]
Meanwhile, the federal government is still wrestling with the prospect of rapidly running out of space, money or both to detain immigrants—especially as family units.
Those factors create an immediate tension with prosecution policy. If the Trump administration stops prosecuting all adults for illegal border entry, it could maintain its detention capacity for longer, but paring back prosecutions would also amount to a significant retreat in the eyes of many, including the president himself.
The White House originally said the issue simply couldn’t be addressed with an executive order. Officials then threw one together, leaving many in the Department of Homeland Security in the dark, all while ignoring the advice of White House Counsel Don McGahn.
Different agencies within the administration, meanwhile, are under the impression that the executive order means different things — relevant departments were “gripped by confusion” yesterday — and the “slapdash nature of the effort” has only intensified the chaos.
Some in the White House aren’t even sure why Trump started separating families at the border in the first place. The Washington Post talked to one senior official who said, “[W]e are all utterly confused why we went through this exercise.”
It can’t be because of an immigration crisis at the border, because there isn’t one — and there hasn’t been one.
What we’re left with is a policy failure — with thousands of isolated children and an administration that’s lost without a map. And a political failure — with Trump’s policy generating a public backlash. And a legislative failure — with Congress unable to pass immigration legislation. And a rhetorical failure — with the White House changing its story “no fewer than 14 times.”









