WASHINGTON (AP) โ President Joe Biden tried to address a major liability for his reelection campaign by taking executive action to significantly restrict asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border.
But it's unclear whether the Democratic president's efforts will be enough to change the minds of voters who have increasingly voiced alarm over the record influx of migrants on his watch. Polls have found immigration and border security to be a top issue this election year and one that has been seized on by former President Donald Trump and his Republican campaign.
Biden has shifted far to the right on immigration since his winning campaign four years ago, when he criticized Trump's immigration priorities and promised he would restore asylum protections. Many Democrats acknowledge Biden now faces a wholly different political reality, even as key parts of his base push him to repudiate border restrictions and compare his move with Trump's policies as president.

Sue-Ann DiVito, a 61-year-old realtor from the Philadelphia suburb of Jenkintown who became an immigration advocate during the Trump administration, says Republicans have been successful at spreading anti-immigrant messages in communities like hers, making some of her friends who are Democrats worry about the high number of people arriving in the U.S.
โI think thatโs why we see people who would normally support immigrants are now more quiet,โ DiVito said.
A CHALLENGE FOR BIDEN AMONG DEMOCRATS AND LATINOS
The border has been a top issue for voters throughout the presidential campaign so far.
According to Gallupโs monthly data, Americans named immigration as the top issue facing the country in February, March, and April, surpassing even the share who cited the economy despite persistently higher prices. Immigration came up less frequently as a top issue in Gallupโs May poll as attention turned to Trumpโs criminal trial and as the number of illegal crossings ebbed. The issue was still tied with the government and the economy as what voters saw as the nationโs most important problem.

Most Americans, 56%, say Bidenโs presidency has hurt the country on the issue of immigration and border security, according to an AP-NORC poll conducted in April. Thatโs far higher than the number โ 37% โ who said the same about Trumpโs time in office.
Even among Democrats, only about 3 in 10 say that Bidenโs presidency has done more to help the country on immigration and border security, while about the same share say it has hurt. Nearly 9 in 10 Republicans say Trumpโs presidency helped on this issue.
Hispanic adults are also more likely to think Trumpโs presidency helped the country with immigration and border security, compared to Bidenโs. About half of Hispanic adults in March said that Bidenโs presidency had done more to hurt the country on immigration and border security โ a potentially alarming number as Trumpโs campaign works to chip away at Democratsโ advantage with Hispanic voters.
โPresident Biden had no choice. He saw what was going on at the border. The numbers were higher than ever in terms of people trying to come here to seek asylum, and he knew he had to do something,โ said Maria Cardona, a Democratic strategist.

Frank Luntz, a longtime pollster who has previously worked for Republicans, said immigration seemed to be especially resonating earlier this spring across the political spectrum in a way it never had before.
He said he believes Biden is especially vulnerable with African American men under 40 who are worried about newcomers competing for jobs and Latinos who may resent those entering illegally.
โThe reason why immigration matters so much to so many is that it is a living, breathing illustration of the failure of Washington to solve what everyone else in America sees as a crisis,โ he said Tuesday. โBidenโs decision seems too little and too late. The public doesnโt think he cares, and therefore thinks he doesnโt get it.โ
TRUMP'S RECORD INCLUDES FAMILY SEPARATION
Trump has been campaigning on the border and immigration since he launched his 2016 bid with a speech in which he cast migrants from Mexico as criminals and rapists and vowed to build a southern border wall.

While in office, his administration separated immigrant parents and children to try to deter families from illegally crossing the border, a measure that drew widespread condemnation.
Border crossings hit record highs โ albeit far below the marks they've reached under Biden โ until falling sharply as the COVID-19 pandemic began.
As he runs to return to the White House again this year, Trump has escalated his already alarmist rhetoric, accusing Biden of orchestrating a โborder bloodbathโ and highlighting cases of women and children killed by people who entered the U.S. illegally. He's vowed to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history if elected again.
His campaign quickly tried to cast Biden's effort as ineffective and one that would permit thousands of migrant crossings each week.

โThis executive order from Biden can only be understood as a pro-invasion, pro-illegal migration executive order,โ said former Trump senior adviser Stephen Miller, who orchestrated some of Trumpโs most hard-line immigration policies, during a call with reporters organized by the campaign ahead of Bidenโs announcement.
Trump pollster John McLaughlin said the campaign believes the issue resonates especially among a group he calls โsafety momsโ โ suburban, college-educated women who are worried about crime and the safety of their families.
โThereโs a sense of insecurity,โ he said. โItโs not just the border communities, itโs all over the country.โ
Trump has always turned to alarmist rhetoric on the border in election years. The difference now, according to Trump campaign aides and pollsters, is the reality voters are seeing day to day.
Crime overall is down and immigrants โ even those who entered the country illegally โ commit fewer crimes than those born in the U.S., according to studies of available data. But in Democratic-led cities like New York, local news reports were flooded earlier this year with images of migrants clashing with police and alarm over strained city budgets and resources to care for an influx of people coming from the border.
Conservative media and Trump's campaign also seized on high-profile incidents like the killing of nursing student Laken Riley. A Venezuelan man in the U.S. illegally has pleaded not guilty to charges in her death.
SPLITS IN THE DEMOCRATIC BASE
Biden's announcement laid bare lasting divisions among Democrats, with some left-leaning lawmakers and immigration advocates that form a key part of his coalition criticizing Biden's actions as a return to the measures that marked Trump's tenure.
Rep. Pramila Jayapal, the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said she was โprofoundly disappointed.โ During a news conference with immigration advocates outside the Capitol, Jayapal pushed the administration to take action that would provide relief for immigrants already in the U.S.
Jayapal, D-Wash., said Tuesdayโs order โmeans that we have people, desperate people seeking asylum who should be able to apply, and yet they will not be able to.โ
Sen. Alex Padilla, a California Democrat who has been involved in the Biden campaignโs outreach to Latino communities, cast the order as a revival of โTrumpโs asylum banโ in a release Tuesday.
โYou can build a wall as high as you want. You can make it as hard to seek asylum as you want. Itโs not going to sustainably reduce the number of people wanting to come to the United States,โ Padilla told reporters.
Still, other Democrats praised Bidenโs move as a necessary measure to respond to votersโ concerns and gain control of a southern border that has at times been chaotic in recent years.
โThe president is saying that, โI hear you, I know this is an issue, and Iโm taking action,โโ said Rep. Tom Suozzi, who has helped form a group of House Democrats focused on border security.
Suozzi, who won a special election in New York this year with a campaign that called for tougher immigration enforcement measures, also called for action to help immigrants who are already in the country.
DiVito, the immigrant advocate in swing-state Pennsylvania, tried to square the difference from a Democratic perspective.
โThere is a choice this November and whatever negative policy that Biden is implementing, Trump is going to be a million things worse," she said. "And we all know this.โ
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Gomez Licon reported from Miami. Associated Press writers Michelle L. Price, Amelia Thomson DeVeaux and Linley Sanders contributed to this report.
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