Biden pressures Trump to unblock migrant plan during dueling border
visits
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[March 01, 2024]
By Steve Holland and Ted Hesson
BROWNSVILLE/EAGLE PASS, Texas (Reuters) -President Joe Biden on Thursday
called on Donald Trump to help unblock a plan languishing in Congress to
cut migrant crossings as the pair took part in dueling visits to the
border over a top issue ahead of November's election. Biden was in the
town of Brownsville, Texas, across the Rio Grande river from Mexico,
where he criticized Republicans for rejecting a bipartisan effort to
toughen immigration rules after Trump told them not to pass it and give
the president a win.
Biden and Trump, the Republican former president making his third bid
for the White House, look set to face each other in what polls show will
be a close election on Nov. 5 that looks set to be a deeply divisive
rematch of the 2020 contest.
"Here's what I would say to Mr Trump: ... Instead of telling members of
Congress to block this legislation, join me, or I'll join you, in
telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan security bill," he said,
while also warning he wanted people to know the cause of the inaction.
After being briefed by border patrol agents and others on the ground,
Biden said they "desperately need more resources."
Trump also met with local officials as well as Texas Governor Greg
Abbott, a Republican, at the Rio Grande before speaking at Shelby Park
in Eagle Pass, where border-crossers have posed a major problem for
authorities in recent months.
"This is a Biden invasion over the past three years," Trump said, citing
crimes committed by migrants and referring to the issue at the border as
a "war", in the latest examples of the increasingly inflammatory
language he has used in recent months.
He pledged to bring back policies in place during his term in office,
including the "Remain in Mexico" plan that required some migrants to
wait in Mexico for the outcome of their U.S. immigration cases.
Several hundred Trump supporters gathered on street corners in an area
overlooking Shelby Park, an area that has been commandeered to block
migrants crossing illegally, carrying “Make America Great Again” and
“Never Surrender” flags.
Biden took office in 2021 promising to reverse the hardline immigration
policies of Trump, who was in office from 2017 to early 2021, but has
since toughened his own approach.
Under pressure from Republicans who accuse him of failing to control the
border, Biden called on Congress last year to provide more enforcement
funding and said he would "shut down the border" if given new authority
to turn back migrants.
The White House is also considering using executive authority to deny
more migrants asylum at the border, a source familiar with the matter
has said.
Republicans have said Biden could better enforce existing laws and take
new executive action without the need for Congress to approve it.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald
Trump speaks with Texas Governor Greg Abbott during a visit at the
U.S.-Mexico border at Eagle Pass, Texas, as seen from Piedras Negras,
Mexico, February 29, 2024. REUTERS/Go Nakamura
Biden was joined by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas,
who Republican lawmakers have narrowly voted to impeach over his
handling of the border, a move unlikely to succeed in the
Democratic-led Senate.
"This visit is focused on the work that we do, not the rhetoric of
others," Mayorkas told reporters on Air Force One.
RISING CONCERN FOR VOTERS
A Reuters-Ipsos poll from Jan. 31 found rising concern among
Americans about immigration, with 17% of respondents listing it as
the most important problem facing the U.S. today, up sharply from
11% in December.
It was the top concern of Republican respondents, with 36% citing it
as their main worry, above the 29% who cited the economy.
Trump was joined on his visit by Abbott, whose administration has
been building a military "base camp" at Eagle Pass to deter
migrants.
Eagle Pass remains a flashpoint in a heated partisan debate over
border security even though the number of migrants caught crossing
illegally into both there and Brownsville dropped sharply in January
and February.
The number of migrants caught crossing the U.S.-Mexico border
illegally hit a monthly record of 250,000 in December but dropped by
half in January, a trend U.S. officials attribute to increased
Mexican enforcement and seasonal trends.
A federal judge in Texas on Thursday blocked the state's new law
giving officials broad powers to arrest, prosecute and order the
removal of people who illegally cross the border.
Abbott has deployed thousands of National Guard troops and laid
concertina wire and river buoys to deter illegal immigration through
a program called Operation Lone Star.
Some Democrats told Reuters they were turning toward Trump in
Maverick County near the border, a rare Democratic stronghold in the
majority Republican state of Texas.
Wendy Riojas, 25, who came to downtown Eagle Pass to see Trump
visiting her hometown, voted for Biden in 2020 but does not know who
she will support in November.
"You feel sometimes for people who are in situations like that who
are dying to get over here," she said. "But I understand more of the
Republican view of ... how about we focus on ourselves first."
(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason, Richard Cowan and Dan Whitcomb;
Writing by Steve Holland and Costas Pitas; Editing by Deepa
Babington and Stephen Coates)
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