The outrage to the Trump administration’s policy of referring all individuals illegally crossing the border for criminal prosecution (and as such, leading to family separations) is growing. It’s visual. It’s visceral. It’s bipartisan.

And yet, at this point on what will be the most significant policy week on the immigration front in months, nobody appears to know what the solution will be.

Bottom line: The vast majority of Republicans on Capitol Hill want the President to, for all intents and purposes, turn off the policy shift on criminal prosecutions. It’s within his power — just as it was to implement it in the first place. But aides in both chambers have said they’ve gotten no indication that’s coming.

Another key point: Those same Republicans have just as much power — and the majorities — to start moving targeted legislation to force a reversal. At this point, that’s not happening.

About the family separation debate: The President wants broad bipartisan immigration legislation that addresses the separation issue. In fact, he (and some of his top aides) has made clear that the family separation issue has become a bargaining chip of sorts in their push for a broader immigration overhaul.

But, right now, there is no bipartisan immigration overhaul in the works in either chamber. The Senate tried it, and failed. The House is moving through a purely partisan effort right now. Democrats aren’t on the table and there’s little sense on either side that they will be any time soon.