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CBS Reporter Finds Border Quiet After Four Hours of Watching
A CBS News immigration reporter spent four hours at the US-Mexico border and saw no illegal immigrants crossing. This observation near a key entry point challenges narratives of unchecked migrant surges under President Trumps watch. It underscores a sharp drop in border activity as his administration ramps up enforcement.
The reporter stationed along the southern frontier expected to witness the chaos often depicted by critics. Instead the area was eerily calm with only Border Patrol agents visible during the stakeout. This aligns with data showing illegal crossings at their lowest in years.
Trump has touted his border security policies as a success since taking office in January. Beefed-up patrols and stricter deportation rules have reportedly deterred many from attempting entry. The quiet scene observed by CBS suggests those measures are hitting their mark.
Democrats and immigration advocates argue the lull reflects fear not progress among migrant communities. They claim families are avoiding detection rather than abandoning plans to cross. Still the absence of activity caught the reporter off guard given past hotspots like this one.
Border Patrol reported a 70 percent drop in apprehensions compared to peak levels under prior administrations. Agents credit new technology and manpower for plugging gaps in the fence line. The CBS findings offer a snapshot of that shift in real time.
Republicans seize on such reports to push for even tougher laws against illegal immigration. They argue a sealed border protects American jobs and safety from trafficking threats. Trumps team may use this to justify expanding the wall despite earlier campaign scaling back.
Skeptics warn a four-hour window proves little about long-term trends. Migrants often cross under cover of night or in remote stretches not easily watched. Yet the stillness bolsters claims that Trumps hardline stance is reshaping the border dynamic.
For now the CBS reporters empty vigil fuels debate over immigration policy. It hands Trump a visual win as he presses Congress for more funding to lock down the frontier. Whether it holds as a lasting trend or fleeting moment remains to be seen.
Coverage Details
| Total News Sources | 24 |
| Left | 6 |
| Right | 10 |
| Center | 7 |
| Unrated | 1 |
| Bias Distribution | 42% Right |
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