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  • Writer's pictureThe San Juan Daily Star

Biden defends border effort, saying nations can’t ‘wall ourselves off’

By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and ANUSHKA PATIL


President Joe Biden earlier this week defended his handling of the border and thanked his Mexican counterpart for a willingness to accept asylum-seekers rejected by the United States during a period of what he called “the greatest migration in human history” across the region.

In remarks at the end of a two-day summit in Mexico City with the leaders of Mexico and Canada, Biden dismissed criticism from Republicans, Democrats and humanitarian groups, calling them the “extremes” and saying he was pursuing a middle ground in his approach to immigration.


“I want to thank the president of Mexico for agreeing to take up to 3,000 people back,” Biden said, apparently referring to the announcement last week that Mexico would accept 30,000 migrants each month from Venezuela, Haiti, Nicaragua and Cuba who attempt to cross into the United States illegally.


That increased enforcement at the border has been condemned by Democrats and human rights groups as an inhumane denial of asylum rights. But Biden said on Tuesday that the creation of new legal immigration programs for people from those countries counterbalanced that effort.


“There can no longer be any question, none, in today’s interconnected world. We cannot wall ourselves off from shared problems,” Biden said, adding, “We’re trying to make it easier for people to get here.”


The president’s comments followed several hours of closed-door discussions with President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada that also focused on the climate crisis, drug trafficking, economic prosperity and trade.


All three men said the summit underscored the cooperation among their governments and played down long-standing disagreements and tensions, especially over the economic competition in energy and emerging technologies such as electric vehicles.


“We’re true partners, the three of us,” Biden said at a news conference after the meetings.


But if the summit was intended to show a shared commitment to addressing immigration, it also showed the intractability of the issue. Questions about how to confront the waves of people fleeing their homelands across Central and South America dominated much of the private discussion and the public statement to the news media, and a fact sheet distributed by the White House listing “key deliverables” from the summit did not include any new major migration initiatives.


Aides to Biden said the broader challenge of how to secure the border was his top priority at the summit. In a one-on-one meeting on Monday night, Biden and López Obrador “reaffirmed their commitment to implement innovative approaches to address irregular migration,” according to a White House summary of the meeting.


At the news conference after the summit, López Obrador delivered a lengthy history of the changes in migration patterns over the past several decades and emphasized his belief that the best way to prevent people from leaving their homes was to invest in making their countries prosperous and safe.


He praised Biden for what he said was a recognition of that reality while criticizing past American presidents for focusing too heavily on trying to keep migrants out of the country.

“You are the first president of the United States in a very long time that has not built not even one meter of wall,” López Obrador said. “And that — we thank you for that, sir.”


The Mexican president also took a veiled swipe at Greg Abbott, the Republican governor of Texas, who bused a group of migrants to Washington last month, dropped them off in frigid weather in front of the Naval Observatory, the home for Vice President Kamala Harris.


“This is politicking. This is completely inhuman,” López Obrador said, referring to “one of the governors” in a “neighboring country” in his remarks. “And this should not be done.”


López Obrador hosted Biden and Trudeau for the closed-door discussions at the National Palace in Mexico City, the seat of government and the residence for the Mexican president.


On climate change, White House officials said the three leaders had agreed to some new targets, including a pledge to “reduce methane emissions from the solid waste and wastewater sector by at least 15% by 2030 from 2020 levels.” They will work to develop a plan to cut down on food waste, and a separate plan for coordinating electric vehicle charging stations along their borders, White House officials said.


Trudeau emphasized economic cooperation on the continent, saying the three leaders were “all dedicated to driving economic growth that supports the middle class and those working hard to join it.”

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