WASHINGTON — The commissioner of Customs Border Protection resigned Saturday after saying he had been pressured to step down by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas amid a record number of migrant crossings at the U.S.-Mexico border.
“The President has accepted the resignation of Christopher Magnus, the Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection,” White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement. Biden appreciates Magnus’ almost 40 years of service and contributions to police reform as police chief in three U.S. cities, she said.
Last week, Jean-Pierre declined to comment when Magnus told The Washington Post he had refused Mayorkas’ request to resign a day after the midterm elections, saying the president retained confidence in the Customs and Border Protection leader.
The White House didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on how the situation changed.
Magnus described a series of disputes with Mayorkas — who oversees Customs and Border Protection — in an interview and said he had traveled to El Paso for a meeting with Border Patrol sector chiefs despite being told not to attend. He maintained that he didn’t intend to quit and remained committed to the agency, a calculus that apparently changed.
“I didn’t take this job as a resume builder,” Magnus said Friday, noting that he came to Washington because he cared about Customs and Border Protection’s mission and the Biden administration’s goals.
Biden nominated Magnus in April 2021, and he became the first Senate-confirmed leader of the agency since 2019. His party-line confirmation fanned hopes among Democrats that he could reorient an agency that had adopted stringent enforcement techniques during the Trump administration.
But Customs and Border Protection saw a record 2.7 million border apprehensions over the past fiscal year, leading some Republicans and the union that represents Border Patrol agents to criticize him.
Magnus’ standing was further hurt by an October story in Politico in which critics described him as disengaged and said he occasionally fell asleep in meetings. Magnus has said he suffers from fatigue as a side effect of multiple sclerosis.