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NHGOP welcomes Vice President Harris to the ‘bad frontier’ as she promotes infrastructure bill

It’s been 30 days since President Joe Biden tapped Vice President Kamala Harris as the “most qualified person” to find a way to stem the tide of migrants at the southern border. While she hasn’t been to the southern border, the vice president did travel to the northern border on Friday during a visit to New Hampshire to promote a so-called infrastructure bill. But that priority hasn’t gone unnoticed by the NHGOP and others, who have pointed out that Harris has ended up at the “wrong border.”

Vice President Harris was there to promote the American Jobs Plan, which is the so-called infrastructure bill, coined in various ways by various members of the administration and their supporters, and is effectively a partisan spending bill. Although almost everything is considered “infrastructure” under the regulations, only about 6 percent actually goes to infrastructure.

In her remarks, Harris congratulated Democratic state Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, who is running for reelection in 2022. The vice president said the bill is about “investing in the skills” of Americans. She also referred to “building better voices” from President Biden. Saying that “the American Jobs Plan is about infrastructure” and that “it’s about roads and bridges,” she also said that “it’s about child care, it’s about a lot of things.”

Spencer included more of her comments and the infrastructure bill in his report here.

It appears that critics of Harris’ role in containing the surge in migrants at the border were right, as the vice president did not travel to the southern border or hold a news conference there.

Known for her bizarre fits of giggles, the vice president laughed when asked if she was going to the border, to which she replied, “not today.” That was a month ago.

More recently, Republican Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio, John Katko of New York and James Comer of Ky. sent a letter to Vice President Harris on Monday, the same day she traveled to North Carolina, where she also promoted the legislation.

The vice president has spoken to Guatemalan presidents, and Mexico will visit those countries at some point, Reagan reported, or at least that’s what Harris says.

Harris on Thursday he did address border crisis during a philanthropic roundtable, but with a mention of climate change. “We’re looking again at the issue of climate resilience and then the concern about the lack of economic opportunity,” she proposed, while suggesting: “We need to give people a sense of hope that help is on the way, a sense of hope that if they stay, things will get better.”

The comments come as the vice president becomes the latest member of the administration to include climate change, link it to other issues or even prioritize climate change over those issues.

Climate czar John Kerry traveled to China last weekend, where he clearly and repeatedly mentioned that he was prioritizing climate change agreements with his Chinese counterparts and that “it’s very important to try to stay away from other issues.”

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