Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

First lady Melania Trump

In Arizona, she again tells officials she wants to help

- LAURIE KELLMAN

visits a Border Patrol facility Thursday in Tucson, Ariz., during a trip to meet people directly affected by her husband’s immigratio­n policies.

PHOENIX — First lady Melania Trump made a second visit to a border state Thursday, meeting face to face with people directly affected by her husband’s hard-line immigratio­n policies. This time, she chose less controvers­ial apparel than her last trip, which was overshadow­ed by a jacket.

“I’m here to support you and give my help, whatever I can” on “behalf of children and the families,” she said as she sat down with officials at a U.S. Border Patrol facility in Tucson, Ariz., the first stop of her trip. She later traveled to Phoenix, where she visited a complex that is housing dozens of migrant children separated from their parents.

It was the first lady’s second trip to a border state during an ongoing outcry over President Donald Trump’s now-suspended policy of separating children from their families when they cross the border without authorizat­ion. Many were placed hundreds of miles away from one another and have been struggling to be reunited.

“She cares about children deeply and when the news started to hit, I think she was very concerned and wanted to make sure the kids are being well taken care of,” Melania Trump’s spokesman, Stephanie Grisham, said on the flight to Arizona. “She doesn’t like to see parents and kids separated.”

Melania Trump made the trip in a risk-averse ensemble of a black sweater and white slacks.

The first lady’s first trip to the region, last week, had been overshadow­ed by a jacket she wore to and from the border town of McAllen, Texas, that had a baffling message on the back: “I really don’t care, do u?”

The choice ignited the Internet and spawned a slew of memes about what the first lady, a former model, may have meant.

Her spokesman said it was just a jacket, with no hidden message. But the first lady’s husband undercut the no-message message by tweeting that she was saying she really doesn’t care about the “fake news” media.

On Thursday, Melania Trump visited what officials described as a short-term holding center for children in Tucson and then traveled to Phoenix, where she visited Southwest Key Campbell, which receives grant money from the Department of

Health and Human Services. A total of 121 children are being held at the facility, including 81 who had been separated from their parents.

She visited three classrooms, including one day care room with nine babies and toddlers. Another classroom had five cribs lined up against a wall.

A staff member at the facility said the children had been there, on average, 48 days.

Grisham said the first lady wanted to learn about the border processes making news around the world.

Asked whether the first lady agrees with her husband’s polices, Grisham said, “She definitely believes in strong border laws,” and wants Congress to strengthen immigratio­n policies. But she also believes in “governing with heart,” Grisham said.

Protesters spent Thursday morning outside a facility for detained children in Tucson that’s operated by the nonprofit Southwest Key.

But Melania Trump instead met with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the agency that oversees the Border Patrol and customs officers.

Anticipati­ng a trip to Phoenix, protesters also gathered outside the Southwest Key facility in the city’s west side. A few dozen protesters ran along the first lady’s motorcade as it departed.

More than 2,300 children have been separated from their parents at the border in recent weeks, and some were placed in government-contracted shelters hundreds of miles away from their parents.

The president last week signed an executive order to halt the separation of families at the border, but the order did not address the reunificat­ion of families already separated.

A federal judge on Tuesday ordered that thousands of children and parents be reunited within 30 days — and sooner if the youngster is under 5. The order poses logistical problems for the administra­tion, and it was unclear how it would meet the deadline.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jill Colvin and Astrid Galvan of The Associated Press.

 ?? The New York Times/DOUG MILLS ??
The New York Times/DOUG MILLS

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