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FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Steve Daines and Rep. Elise Stefanik are urging House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to call votes on a bill that would force the Biden administration to open the Canadian border, citing economic harm to their constituents who rely on cross-border commerce to make a living.

Daines, R-Mont., and Stefanik, R-N.Y., said they "urge immediate action" on the bill "to reopen the U.S.–Canada border for nonessential travel and revitalize American jobs and tourism."

"It is past time for Congress to act and bring long-overdue relief to families and businesses in northern border communities, who have suffered nearly 18 months of hardship and uncertainty due to the travel restrictions," they added. 

The border closure has been extended over and over since the beginning of the coronavirus  pandemic, most recently on Aug. 20 when the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced that the closure will extend until at least Sept. 21. Daines and Stefanik argue that the continued closure is not justified in light of the progress the U.S. has made in fighting the pandemic, like vaccines. 

US COMMUNITIES NEAR CANADA BORDER HOPE TO SEE COVID-19 TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS EXPIRE

"The reduction in cross-border traffic has had a significant impact on local economies along the northern border, including agriculture, small businesses, and tourism," they said. 

Daines' state of Montana and Stefanik's state of New York each share hundreds of miles of border with Canada. Stefanik notably represents her state's 21st Congressional District, which includes the northernmost part of the state and most of its land border with Canada. As a senator, Daines represents all of Montana. 

In its most recent extension of the border closure, DHS cited the delta variant of COVID-19 in addition to the existence of the virus itself. 

"To minimize the spread of #COVID19, including the delta variant, the United States is extending restrictions on nonessential travel at our land and ferry crossings with Canada and Mexico through Sept. 21, while continuing to ensure the flow of essential trade and travel," the agency said. "In coordination with public health and medical experts, DHS continues working closely with its partners across the United States and internationally to determine how to safely and sustainably resume normal travel."

The delta variant's spread has led to a significant increase in COVID-19 cases in the United States and stressed hospital systems in some areas. 

CANADA REOPENS ITS BORDER FOR VACCINATED US VISITORS

But Daines and Stefanik noted in their letter that Canada has taken steps to open its border with the United States, while the Biden administration continues to refuse what it deems nonessential travel of Canadians into the U.S.

US-Canadian border, border crossing, Blaine Washington, opening of Canadian border

A Canadian border official, left, looks on at a line of vehicles waiting to enter Canada at the Peace Arch border crossing Monday, Aug. 9, 2021, in Blaine, Wash. Canada lifted its prohibition on Americans crossing the border to shop, vacation or visit, but America kept similar restrictions in place, part of a bumpy return to normalcy from coronavirus travel bans. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson) (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

"While the Canadian government opened its border to fully vaccinated American travelers on Aug. 9 in clear recognition of the close bilateral partnership our nations share, the Biden administration failed to reciprocate these measures and delayed reopening the border for at least another month," Daines and Stefanik said. "To make matters worse, the Biden administration has provided zero transparency on the metrics and decision-making process guiding these continued restrictions."

Daines and Stefanik are not the only politicians pressing the Biden administration to reopen the border. 

"The percentage of Canada’s population that is fully vaccinated is now more than 12 percentage points higher than in the United States, yet the Biden administration refuses to reopen the border to Canadians for nonessential travel," North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, a Republican, lamented in a statement last month.

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Democrat Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said last month, according to the Grand Forks Herald, that he hopes the Biden administration will "reconsider" its border closure. 

Walz and Burgum were also among the nine governors who signed a letter from the National Governors Association to the Biden administration in late July asking for a "detailed briefing" on its plan to open the border.