The Borneo Post

Trump backtracks on threat to close Mexico border

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Thursday retreated from his threat to close the US-Mexican border, warning he will instead impose car import tariffs if the major US trading partner does not do more to stop undocument­ed migrants and drug smugglers.

“If Mexico doesn’t give the help, that’s OK, we’re going to tariff their cars,” Trump said at the White House.

“I will do it. I don’t play games.”

Trump said he was giving Mexico one year to get the crossborde­r drug trade down or see him impose tariffs at 25 percent. If that does not work, closing the border would come next, he said.

It was not immediatel­y clear if Trump’s demand for Mexico to crack down on the flow of migrants also faces a one year deadline or has to be satisfied in the near future.

Trump said that Mexico had started to detain would-be migrants this week, responding to his repeated recent threats to close the border.

Mexico is doing a ‘really great job’ at ‘grabbing and taking’ people, he said.

But suggesting that he wants immediate results, he added that “maybe by the end of this news conference or tomorrow that will stop, and if that stops, we are doing a big tariff.”

Regardless, the tariffs option signaled a retreat from previous suggestion­s that the border might be shut down, at least in parts, within days.

Trump says there is a national emergency from the influx of undocument­ed migrants and drugs and that drastic action is needed.

A planned visit on Friday to

If Mexico doesn’t give the help, that’s OK, we’re going to tariff their cars. I will do it. I don’t play games.

the California border area had raised expectatio­ns for a dramatic move. However, his border closure threat alarmed politician­s across the country, including in his own Republican Party, who warned of dire economic fallout.

This was the second apparent climbdown by Trump on a big issue in a week.

Earlier, he backed away from announceme­nts that the Republican­s were ready to reform America’s notoriousl­y expensive healthcare system, when party leaders indicated they did not want to get sucked into what amounts to a political minefield.

Trump’s new border policy was first announced in a confusing statement to journalist­s at a White House meeting on the completely unconnecte­d subject of US urban renewal.

Speaking without notes, full of digression­s and often failing to finish sentences, Trump was not wholly clear on the details of his border policy changes.

“If Mexico doesn’t do what they can do very easily, apprehend these people coming in... we’re going to tax the cars, and if that doesn’t work, we’re going to close the borders,” he said.

“We’re also going to do something having to do with tariffs on drugs because... hundreds of thousands of lives (are) ruined a year in our country,” he said.

Donald Trump, US president

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Trump is seen in this file photo speaking during a White House Opportunit­y and Revitalisa­tion Council in the Cabinet room at the White House in Washington, US.
— Reuters photo Trump is seen in this file photo speaking during a White House Opportunit­y and Revitalisa­tion Council in the Cabinet room at the White House in Washington, US.

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