By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden is expected to sign an executive order on migration in an attempt to take greater control of the U.S. southern border with Mexico, two sources familiar with the plans said on Thursday.
Biden’s order will likely shut off asylum requests and deny entrance to migrants once a daily threshold is exceeded, the sources said.
Biden, a Democrat seeking a second four-year term in the Nov. 5 election, has toughened his approach to border security in recent months as immigration has emerged as a top concern among voting-age Americans.
Republicans, including Biden’s opponent, former President Donald Trump, have criticized the president for rolling back restrictive Trump-era border policies and failing to stem higher levels of illegal crossings.
The sources cautioned that Biden had yet to give a final approval to the plan. The announcement could come on Tuesday, the sources said. The White House declined comment.
Biden said in a Univision interview in April that he and his administration were trying to determine whether he has the authority to act on his own to shut down the U.S.’s southern border with Mexico to migrants, should it be deemed necessary.
(Reporting by Steve Hollandd; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Leslie Adler)