Mexican
president thanks California for aiding undocumented migrants
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[August 27, 2014]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO Calif. (Reuters) - Mexican President
Enrique Pena Nieto thanked California on Thursday for improving the
lives of immigrants from his country, including legalizing drivers'
licenses for undocumented migrants and making it easier for them to work
and start businesses.
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Pena Nieto, on his first trip to the United States since becoming
president in 2012, addressed a joint session of the California
legislature, detailing economic and electoral reforms enacted back
home and emphasizing his country's social and economic ties to the
state.
"I want to thank you for what you have done for migrants, especially
the ones from Mexico," Pena Nieto said. "It's no coincidence that my
first visit to the United States is in California."
Pena Nieto's visit was the latest in a series of exchanges with
Mexico that included a trip to that country last month by California
Governor Jerry Brown, a Democrat, and a visit to Sacramento by
Mexico's foreign minister, Jose Antonio Meade.
The visits, part of an ongoing effort to further economic ties
between California and Mexico, are taking place against a backdrop
of growing tensions from the flow of thousands of undocumented
children from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras into the United
States from Mexico.
For their part, the Mexican leaders have expressed concern that
efforts to enact comprehensive immigration reform have stalled in
the U.S., amid opposition from Republicans in Congress.
On Thursday, several Republican state lawmakers who had been invited
to a luncheon with Pena Nieto declined to attend, citing the ongoing
detention of U.S. Marine Sergeant Andrew Tahmooressi, who was
arrested on March 31 by Mexican customs agents who found guns in his
pickup truck at the San Ysidro border crossing between San Diego and
Tijuana.
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A group of protesters demonstrated against Tahmooressi's detention
across the street from Sacramento's Leland Stanford Mansion, where
the luncheon was being held.
Tahmooressi maintains he accidentally crossed the border, and had no
intention of transporting weapons across an international border. He
is being held in a federal penitentiary in Mexico.
“I could not go to the lunch in good conscience,” said state Senator
Joel Anderson, a Republican whose district includes parts of
Riverside County east of Los Angeles. “I don’t have an appetite for
foreign dignitaries who deny U.S. citizens their human rights.”
Pena Nieto did not discuss the issue of the migrant children or the
Tahmooressi case.
(Additional reporting by Joaquin Palomino in San Francisco; Editing
by Eric Walsh)
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