thank you for inviting us down here to the border. I know you’ve been meeting with officials, going on tours. And I wonder how it’s changed what you think about what’s going on, and how you balance the national security concerns against some of the very real humanitarian issues?SPEAKER JOHNSON: Yeah, we have a humanitarian catastrophe here. And, of course, huge national security concerns. Before I became speaker of the house, I served on the House Judiciary Committee, which has partial jurisdiction over the immigration crisis. So I’ve been dialed in on this for quite a while and knew what was happening here. I’d been to the border before. But this is the largest congressional delegation, we think, that’s ever been to the border together. We had 64 House Republicans here today, as you noted, and met with local officials and local stakeholders, from sheriffs, to landowners, to the federal Border Patrol agents who are doing heroic work here. And what we saw is, in- in some ways, difficult to describe. Just the magnitude of the chaos here, of the number of lives that are adversely affected, the- you know, minor children that are being trafficked into the country. And, of course, we all know the fentanyl overdoses and poisoning that has been a scourge on the country. The cartels are estimated to be making here just in the Del Rio sector, about $32 million a week in trafficking humans.