Border visit to highlight an overwhelmed El Paso
Joe Biden’s choice of El Paso, Texas, as the site of his first presidential visit to the U.S.-Mexico border puts a spotlight on a city that has struggled to deal with a four-fold surge in the number of migrants on its streets.
Mayor Oscar Leeser — a Democrat like Biden — has said shelters and charity groups in his city have been overwhelmed as El Paso became a popular crossing point over the past few months, putting it at the center of a national debate about border security.
Leeser even borrowed a tactic from Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who has been sharply critical of what he calls Biden’s failures at the border. The city spent millions of dollars on buses to transport migrants released into the city to other locales in the U.S., including New York. Unlike the state, El Paso coordinated the trips with officials in the destination cities to make sure services were waiting for them upon arrival.
“El Paso has become the epicenter of the humanitarian crisis,” said Fernando Garcia, the executive director of the Border Network for Human Rights, an El Pasobased advocacy group that pushes for immigration reform.
Leeser, who oversees a city of 700,000 people, a quarter of whom are immigrants, has been a vocal proponent of comprehensive immigration reform. He said in an interview with NPR last month that “we cannot continue to go in this direction.
“As we all know, our immigration system is broken,” Leeser said. “I look forward to discussing our immigration challenges with the president and working with him as we work to address them in the most humane way possible.”
By visiting the border, Biden will be meeting demands from Republican officials as well as some of his Democratic allies to get a firsthand look at the situation. Critics say his administration has turned a blind eye to drug trafficking and human smuggling while failing to protect the country’s sovereignty.
In an effort to cut down on new arrivals, Biden’s administration on Thursday announced a new policy expanding opportunities for people from four countries to come to the U.S. directly while restricting their ability to enter from Mexico. The change allows up to 30,000 additional migrants per month from Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti and Venezuela.
The city has a website where it recruits volunteers to aid the migrants, and stresses a humanitarian approach. It has spent almost $10 million to bus migrants to other cities.
El Paso officials say they began seeing a significant increase in illegal crossings in late August, with the number of people processed by immigration authorities and then released to the city and local humanitarian agencies growing from 250 a day to more than 1,000 a day in September. The number of migrant encounters by the border patrol in the El Paso region surpassed 55,800 in November, the latest data available, which far exceeds the average monthly figures in fiscal 2020 and 2021.
Biden’s visit to El Paso will be followed by a summit among the leaders of Canada, Mexico and the U.S. in Mexico City in the days after. Trade and immigration are sure to be among the topics the leaders will discuss.