Florida governor defends migrant flights to Martha's Vineyard, suggests
more to come
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[September 17, 2022]
By Jonathan Allen and Rich McKay
MARTHA'S VINEYARD, Mass. (Reuters) -
Florida's Republican governor on Friday defended his decision to fly
dozens of migrants to the wealthy vacation island of Martha's Vineyard
from Texas, and said similar actions could follow as a political dispute
over border security deepened in the run-up to U.S. elections in
November.
DeSantis claimed credit for a pair of chartered flights on Wednesday
that carried around 50 migrants to Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, as
part of a broader Republican effort to shift responsibility for border
crossers to Democratic leaders.
At a news conference in Daytona Beach, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
blamed Democratic President Joe Biden for what he portrayed as a failure
to stop migrants from crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, as a record 1.8
million have been arrested this fiscal year.
DeSantis said the Florida Legislature set aside $12 million to transport
migrants out of the state and that his government would likely use the
funds "to protect Florida."
"There may be more flights, there may be buses," he said to cheers and
applause from backers in the crowd.
The state paid $615,000 to Vertol Systems Company Inc, an aviation
business, on Sept. 8 as part of a "relocation program of unauthorized
aliens," Florida state data showed. The company did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
The flights to Martha's Vineyard follow a busing effort by Texas
Governor Greg Abbott, another Republican, that has sent more than 10,000
migrants to the Democrat-controlled cities of Washington, New York and
Chicago since April. The Republican governor of Arizona also has sent
more than 1,800 migrants to Washington.
Unlike those major cities, the island south of Boston is home to around
20,000 year-round residents and is known as a vacation spot for affluent
liberals like former Democratic Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack
Obama.
On Friday morning in Martha's Vineyard, the migrants, a group of mostly
Venezuelans including half a dozen children, boarded buses en route to a
ferry to Cape Cod in transportation organized by Massachusetts Governor
Charlie Baker, a Republican. He said they would be housed temporarily at
a Cape Cod military base.
The scene left some of the island residents who volunteered to shelter
them in a church for two nights in tears. Locals had come together to
donate money, toiletries and toys for the migrants. A local thrift shop
donated clean clothes, restaurants took turns organizing meals and
pro-bono lawyers flew in to help the migrants with paperwork and
immigration cases.
"I want them to have a good life," said Lisa Belcastro, who helped
organize cots and supplies at St. Andrews Episcopal Church, which sits
among expensive white-clapboard homes in Edgartown. "I want them to come
to America and be embraced. They all want to work."
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Venezuelan migrants stand outside St.
Andrew's Church in Edgartown, Massachusetts, U.S. September 14,
2022. Ray Ewing/Vineyard Gazette/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
'LIKE CHATTEL'
DeSantis, who is running for reelection in November and is often
mentioned as a possible presidential candidate for 2024, said his
administration flew the migrants from Texas, and not his own state,
to the island getaway because many of the migrants arriving in
Florida come from Texas.
In addition to re-election bids by DeSantis and Abott, November's
midterm elections will determine whether the Democrats retain
control of Congress.
Many migrants who cross into the United States via the Southwest
border are immediately expelled to Mexico or other countries under a
COVID-19 pandemic policy. But some nationalities, including
Venezuelans, cannot be expelled because Mexico will not accept them
and many seek to apply for U.S. asylum.
The White House has decried the Republican governors' efforts,
saying migrants were being used in a political stunt.
"These were children. They were moms. They were fleeing communism.
And what did Governor DeSantis and Governor Abbott do to them? They
used them as political pawns, treated them like chattel," White
House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at a press briefing on
Friday.
The legal basis for the Florida government to round up migrants in a
different state remained unclear. U.S. government attorneys are
exploring possible litigation around the governors' efforts, a Biden
administration official told Reuters.
The migrants flown to Martha's Vineyard said they had recently been
admitted into the United States on humanitarian parole after fleeing
Venezuela, and had been staying at a shelter in San Antonio, Texas,
when they were approached by a woman who identified herself as "Perla."
The woman persuaded them to board the flights by misleading them
into thinking they were heading to Boston and would be provided
shelter and assistance finding work for three months, they said.
Many said they told the people who organized the flights they had
appointments with immigration authorities they needed to attend in
other cities, said Ivan Espinoza-Madrigal, the director of Lawyers
for Civil Rights, a group in Boston assisting the migrants.
"The organizers of this scheme said 'Don't worry, that will be taken
care of'" he said.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts,
and Rich McKay in Atlanta; Additional reporting by Ted Hesson and
Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington and Kristina Cooke in San Francisco;
Editing by Mica Rosenberg and Jonathan Oatis)
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