Jill Biden, first lady and wife of President Joe Biden in Washington, D.C (Shutterstock)
By Jim Acosta, Kate Bennett and Priscilla Alvarez, CNN
(CNN) – The Biden administration’s planned task force aimed at reuniting children who were separated from their parents at the border under the Trump-era enforcement policies will include input from first lady Jill Biden, according to three sources familiar with the planning.
Biden is tasking her East Wing with taking an active role in the reunification project. Her interest in the task force could offer something of stark contrast with former first lady Melania Trump.
Trump made her first trip to visit a border facility for children and families in Texas in June 2018 in the midst of the zero-tolerance separation controversy but did so wearing a jacket emblazoned with the words, “I really don’t care. Do U?” The jacket spawned a news cycle of its own, drawing attention away from Trump’s objective for the visit, and helping create a public perception of a first lady disinterested in the issue. In an interview several months after her border trip, Trump called the separation of families, “unacceptable” and “heartbreaking.”
The current first lady’s upcoming involvement in the issue and its targeted task force will lend visibility to the mission of reuniting children with their parents, which remains a crisis for many families. Lawyers are still unable to reach the parents of 611 children who had been split from their families by US border officials between 2017 and 2018, according to the latest court filing. The Justice Department also officially rescinded the policy Tuesday in a memo to federal prosecutors, even though it had already been ended.