US, Mexico to clamp down on illegal immigration, leaders say

Asylum-seeking migrants lining up near the border while waiting to be transported by the US Border Patrol after crossing the border from Mexico into the US, in Jacumba Hot Springs, California, on April 29. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY - The United States and Mexico plan to clamp down on illegal immigration at their shared border, leaders from both countries said on April 29, vowing to disrupt irregular crossings that have reached record levels in recent years.

In a phone conversation on April 28, US President Joe Biden and his Mexican counterpart Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said their administrations would soon take steps to decrease illegal crossings while also addressing the economic and security problems that cause people to migrate.

“In the short term, the two leaders ordered their national security teams to work together to immediately implement concrete measures to significantly reduce irregular border crossings while protecting human rights,” the leaders said in a joint statement.

Mr Biden, a Democrat seeking another four-year term in the Nov 5 election, has toughened his approach to border security in recent months as immigration has emerged as a top concern among voting-age Americans.

Republicans, including Mr Biden’s opponent, former president Donald Trump, have criticised the President for rolling back restrictive Trump-era border policies and failing to stem higher levels of illegal crossings.

The White House has considered utilising Mr Biden’s executive authority to block migrants at the border, Reuters has reported, but such a move could trigger legal challenges and backlash from some Democrats.

The White House is also discussing ways to provide temporary legal status and work permits to immigrants in the US illegally who are married to American citizens, which could serve as a political counterbalance to restrictions at the border.

Mr Biden backed a bipartisan US Senate Bill earlier in 2024 that would grant him new authority to turn away migrants at the US-Mexico border, but Republicans rejected the measure after Trump came out in opposition.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said last week that the Biden administration still supports the Bill but that “we’re always going to look at our options”.

Mexico will hold a presidential election on June 2, although immigration is not a top voter concern, according to public opinion polls. Former Mexico City mayor Claudia Sheinbaum, Mr Lopez Obrador’s successor in the leftist National Regeneration Movement, remains the front runner to win the election.

Mr Lopez Obrador told reporters on April 29 that he had spoken with Mr Biden about keeping the countries’ border open to legal immigration “but not allowing irregular migration”.

The US Border Patrol caught a monthly record of 250,000 migrants crossing illegally in December, but numbers have dropped significantly since then, with 137,000 arrests in March.

Mr Lopez Obrador attributed the reduced arrivals at the US-Mexico border in part to social programmes Mexico has backed in other Latin American countries from where migrants originate. US and Mexican officials have cited increased enforcement by Mexico as a factor contributing to the decrease in crossings. REUTERS

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