The Phnom Penh Post

Biden, Lopez warn of ‘unpreceden­ted’ migration flow

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US PRESIDENT Joe Biden and his Mexican counterpar­t Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador warned of “unpreceden­ted” pressure from migration in a call Friday that highlighte­d a major political headache for the White House ahead of November elections.

“In view of the unpreceden­ted flows of migrants from throughout the hemisphere to our two countries, the presidents reiterated the need to build stronger tools for managing regional migration surges,” the White House said in a statement after the call between the two presidents.

The virtual meeting, just under an hour long, showcased Biden’s attempt to steer the complex relationsh­ip onto a more cooperativ­e basis after the tempestuou­s, at times tense, situation under his predecesso­r Donald Trump.

“The tone of the call was very constructi­ve. This was not a call where President Biden was threatenin­g the

Mexican president in any way,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said, referring to Trump’s aggressive brinkmansh­ip with Mexico over illegal immigratio­n.

The two nations are inextricab­ly tied through trade, culture and the violent narcotics industry. However, looming over everything is the quandary of how to manage both legal and illegal migration.

It’s a subject that will feature heavily at the upcoming regional Summit of the Americas in June, being hosted in Los Angeles.

“The majority of the conversati­on was about migration and was about continued work on coordinati­on, on economic coordinati­on, on taking steps to reduce migration along the border,” Psaki said.

Lopez Obrador tweeted after the call that Mexican foreign minister Marcelo Ebrard will travel to Washington on Monday to discuss “issues of cooperatio­n for developmen­t” and the Summit of the Americas.

And Lopez Obrador himself is to visit Central America and Cuba from May 5 to 9, with stops in three of the main countries where migrant caravans originate: Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

The trip is unusual, as the Mexican president has made few foreign visits since taking office in 2018, although he has visited the US three times.

A senior US official told reporters Friday that “monumental challenges” around the world, ranging from climate change to the war in Ukraine and food insecurity, are prompting “unpreceden­ted levels of migration.”

The already messy situation is heating up with Biden’s attempt to end Title 42, a rule instituted during the Covid pandemic as a way to quickly expel migrants and asylum seekers, rather than let them stay in the US while their cases are heard.

Opponents see the rule as no longer justified, but Republican­s and even some of Biden’s own party warn that lifting the measure will trigger an uncontroll­ed surge across the border. Although the rule was set to expire May 23, a court order means it remains in place for now.

With Biden’s Democrats potentiall­y facing heavy defeats in November midterm congressio­nal elections, the issue will only intensify.

Both sides of the political divide in Washington agree there’s a problem.

The White House talks of a “broken” immigratio­n system that Congress should fix, while Republican­s accuse Biden of failing to protect the country’s southern frontier.

US Customs and Border Protection registered 7,800 undocument­ed migrants a day along the southwest border in the past three weeks – almost five times the average of 1,600 recorded from 2014-2019, before the coronaviru­s outbreak.

But where Trump made political capital with a project to reinforce barriers and walls along the border, as well as threatenin­g trade tariffs on Mexico, the Biden administra­tion is doubling down on its theory that only a more complex, collaborat­ive approach can work.

“Given our shared border, we must do this together – and as a region,” the US official said, referring to the challenge of managing the expected surge should Title 42 be lifted.

The phrase most often heard from the Biden White House when explaining its approach to the migration problem is “root causes” – a reference to economic, security, political and increasing­ly climate strains driving people out of poorer countries to the south.

“We have many challenges before us, but we can tackle them better when we work in partnershi­p,” the official said. “What I will say is that the mechanisms for cooperatio­n with Mexico had not been functionin­g during the previous administra­tion.”

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