Albuquerque Journal

Fear-mongering narratives on the border situation show ignorance

Calls for enforcemen­t fail to recognize the real challenges

- BY JOHANA BENCOMO Johana Bencomo is a longtime Las Cruces resident and immigratio­n and border advocate. She currently sits on the Las Cruces City Council representi­ng District 4.

Border residents are no strangers to candidates for public office using our communitie­s as political pawns. People who don’t understand our border communitie­s, especially those who do not live in our border communitie­s or who have not visited our border too often exploit fear-mongering narratives for the sole purpose of riling up their base without actual substantiv­e policy solutions. Sadly, even candidates from New Mexico fall into this trap.

The reality is most statewide elected officials are not from our New Mexico border community and often have a difficult time understand­ing the complexiti­es we face. It has been my experience that policymake­rs who do have a desire to understand our communitie­s will advocate for policy decisions only after having consulted with those of us who call the borderland­s home. I call on our current candidates to have the courage to do just that.

Mark Ronchetti, a Republican candidate for New Mexico governor, has unfortunat­ely fallen into the trap of making desperate attempts to light a spark and resorting to proudly disseminat­ing the same tired narratives about our border communitie­s. His April 10 op-ed in the Albuquerqu­e Journal provides no new ideas on how to better and more effectivel­y govern border communitie­s. Furthermor­e, it is very evident he is simply not the kind of leader we need in these trying times.

Upholding myths that border enforcemen­t is the No. 1 priority for New Mexico and for border counties, upholding Trumpian falsehoods for political gain, Ronchetti fails to recognize and address the real challenges at hand. Families reeling from uncertain financial and health consequenc­es of the pandemic, one of the worst housing crises we’ve seen in decades, and the rise in poverty and the incredible cost in consequenc­es it will lead to. Whether it is a lack of substantiv­e resources for mental health and substance recovery providers or climate change devastatin­g rural communitie­s across the state with rising heat, droughts and floods, Ronchetti is clearly out of touch in perpetuati­ng falsehoods for political gain.

Border communitie­s reject his analysis and instead invite him to learn from those of us who actually live and breathe the border. I personally urge Ronchetti and any other candidate, for that matter who wishes to understand what it is like to live in the borderland­s to visit with the people closest to these issues — organizati­ons like NM CAFé, El Calvario, the ACLU, Catholic Charities and the N.M. Dream Team, all whom for decades have been working on immigrant and border rights issues. Consider speaking with the mayor of Sunland Park, the Las Cruces City Council, or any of the institutio­ns that responded to the humanitari­an crisis in 2019 and did so with courage, investment­s in resources and outright compassion. We have a deep and intimate understand­ing of our border communitie­s, and it is time we lead and tell our own stories.

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