In September 2022, weeks before the midterm election, then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., announced the GOP’s “Commitment to America,” a promise that a newly elected Republican majority would create an “economy that’s strong,” “a nation that’s safe,” “a future that’s built on freedom” and “a government that’s accountable.”

Expanding the safe-nation vow, Republicans pledged to “secure the southern border,” “reduce crime and stop fentanyl” and “defend our national security.”

The Republican Party squeezed out a narrow House majority, and could do no better than a 50-50 Senate tie leaving deciding votes to Vice President Kamala Harris.

During the ensuing 15 months, month-over-month border conditions consistently worsened.

When McCarthy made his announcement, just before fiscal year 2022 ended, 2.8 illegal aliens had crossed the border, a then-record.

The following year, the House Committee on Homeland Security released its report titled “Startling Stats,” which found that in fiscal year 2023, Customs and Border Protection arrested arrested 35,433 aliens with criminal convictions or outstanding warrants, including 598 known gang members, 178 of those being MS-13 members.

CBP, including its Air and Marine Operations, seized 27,293 pounds of fentanyl coming across the southern border, an 88% increase over fiscal year 2022, and enough to kill, the committee estimated, about 6 billion people.

So much for the “Commitment to America” and its promise to secure the southern border, stop fentanyl and defend national security.

For months, congressional Republicans have made rumblings about impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, but their words were empty.

The low point came when, in November 2022, Rep. Tom McLintock, R-Calif., the House Judiciary Committee’s chairman of the Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security and Enforcementjoined with Democrats and seven other Republicans to vote against a resolution to impeach Mayorkas.

When, two years into the invasion, a leading Republican who oversees “immigration integrity” teamed up with committed open-borders Democrats like House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., enforcement is a pipe dream.

From the instant President Joe Biden signed his Day One executive orders that undid former President Donald Trump’s actions to restore prudent immigration, migrant caravans moved north.

Interviewed along the way, the illegal aliens, also encouraged by Biden’s campaign promise to welcome asylum seekers and to end deportations, expressed confidence that work authorization and employment awaited them.

Within a few weeks, the migrants’ predictions came true. At that relatively early juncture in what was Mayorkas’ clearly brazen and treasonous disregard for federal immigration law, the House should have impeached the Homeland Security Department secretary.

In the end, the motion would have failed. But an early House effort might have moved the border chaos higher up on the public’s radar.

Instead, unchecked, Mayorkas’ unconstitutional dismantling of established immigration law at the border and the interior accelerated.

After months of back and forth, the House appears ready to begin the impeachment process against Mayorkas. On their trip to Eagle Pass, Texas, earlier this month, the 60-plus House delegation that included Rep. Mark Green, R-Tenn., chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said his panel will officially begin an effort this month to impeach Mayorkas, an indefatigable witness.

In his multiple appearances before the House and national television audiences, Mayorkas has proven adept at giving vague answers to specific questions or avoiding any response. [House impeachment hearings began Jan. 10.]

Most recent example: During a Jan. 4 nationally televised interview, Mayorkas refused to state exactly how many illegal aliens immigration officials apprehended crossing the U.S.-Mexico border between ports of entry have been released into the interior under the Biden administration. Although he admitted he knew the answer, he refused to share the data.

Little wonder that Mayorkas was tight-lipped. The House Judiciary Committee knows the answer that Mayorkas dutifully concealed.

Since Biden took office on Jan. 20, 2021, at least 3.8 million illegal aliens either have been released into the nation’s interior or successfully evaded CBP agents to enter the country, a population that exceeds that of 22 states and the District of Columbia.

When pressed to provide a solution, Mayorkas invariably points to Congress to fix the nation’s “broken immigration system,” three words that translate to amnesty.

But if existing immigration laws had been enforced for the last five decades rather than disregarded in varying degrees by eight consecutive Republican and Democratic administrations — Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Trump, and most catastrophically, Biden — sovereign America wouldn’t be in its current dire straits.

Secure borders aren’t a Republican or Democratic issue, but a national U.S. priority.

Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst who has written about immigration for more than 30 years. A California native who now lives in Pittsburgh, he can be reached at jguzzardi@ifspp.org. The opinions expressed are his own.