Trump looms over Texas border rally targeting illegal immigration
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[February 03, 2024]
By Ted Hesson and Maria Alejandra Cardona
QUEMADO, Texas (Reuters) - Protesters who trekked in a vehicle convoy to
Texas this week, including some flying pro-Donald Trump banners
alongside American and Texas flags, are expected to rally against
illegal immigration near the U.S.-Mexico border on Saturday.
Dozens of cars gathered outside a Christian children's ranch in the
remote town of Quemado on Friday night, some adorned with Trump
paraphernalia and other conservative messages.
Border security remained an overarching theme, but protesters also
carried signs opposing the Black Lives Matter movement while others
spoke of unfounded government conspiracies related to COVID-19 vaccines.
Immigration has become a potent political issue in an election year
likely to see a rematch between Trump, a Republican, and his Democratic
successor, President Joe Biden.
Trump has motivated his base voters with calls for more restrictive
border practices, while critics worry such policies and events like the
convoy could fuel anti-immigrant sentiment.
Rob Brace, a 79-year-old retired podiatrist, rode his motorcycle alone
eight hours from McAllen, Texas, to greet the convoy, saying he felt
compelled to come because of the high levels of illegal immigration.
"People just seem to ignore the fact that our country is in a very bad
situation," he said.
A long line of cars, trucks and campers paraded into the ranch around 8
p.m. with horn honking and cheers.
The "Take Our Border Back" protest began with a vehicle convoy that
trekked from Virginia to Quemado, near Eagle Pass - a border area at the
forefront of legal and political disputes over immigration enforcement.
Smaller events were planned in Yuma, Arizona, and San Ysidro,
California.
U.S. Representative Keith Self, a conservative Republican who represents
a district in northeast Texas, plans to speak at Saturday's rally.
Whether other lawmakers or national figures might appear remained
unclear.
Conservative personalities Sarah Palin, a former Republican vice
presidential candidate, and Ted Nugent, a rock musician and outspoken
gun rights proponent, made an unannounced appearance on Thursday as the
convoy overnighted further north in Dripping Springs, Texas.
While some at Thursday's event spoke of religious values, Nugent called
Biden a "devil-scum snake" in a caustic speech before performing the
U.S. national anthem on guitar.
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A participant of 'Take Back Our Border' rally against migrants
crossing from Mexico, rides a motorcycle before the event starts at
Cornerstone Children's Ranch in Quemado, Texas, U.S., February 2,
2024. REUTERS/Go Nakamura
Organizers have billed the convoy and rally as peaceful, but some
extremism experts are concerned about the message it sends.
Minnesota-based pastor Doug Pagitt tried to enter the ranch on
Friday after stopping in the area as part of a tour to combat what
he calls "Christian nationalism," but was denied entry as
participants told him "you're not wanted."
"We want to engage," Pagitt said afterward.
The number of migrants arrested trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico
border has climbed to record highs since Biden took office in 2021.
After a spike in December, migrant arrests fell by 50% in the first
half of January, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
Internal CBP statistics reviewed by Reuters showed 216 migrant
arrests on Tuesday across the entire Del Rio Sector, which covers a
245-mile (400-km) stretch of the Rio Grande and encompasses Eagle
Pass. In mid-December, that figure at times topped 4,000 per day,
internal figures show.
U.S. officials have cautioned the slowdown could be seasonal
although the Mexican government also increased enforcement.
Eagle Pass has achieved national prominence in recent months as
Texas' Republican Governor Greg Abbott has clashed with Biden over
the state's aggressive tactics to deter crossers, including troops,
concertina wire and a floating buoy barrier in the Rio Grande.
Abbott and 14 other Republican governors plan to hold a press
conference in Eagle Pass on Sunday to defend the state’s border
security tactics.
Reuters witnesses on Friday saw two migrants who crossed the Rio
Grande near Eagle Pass penned in between two barriers of concertina
wire as they shaded themselves with cloth to avoid the sun.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson and Maria Alejandra Cardona in Quemado;
Additional reporting by Go Nakamura in Quemado and Helen Coster in
New York City; Editing by William Mallard)
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