Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TRUMP’S VISIT

El Pasans irked at city becoming a poster child for divider

- WILL WEISSERT Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Astrid Galvan of The Associated Press.

to tout border wall has El Paso residents disputing his claims.

EL PASO, Texas — President Donald Trump is holding a rally in this west Texas border city today to show why he’s demanding more than 100 miles of new walls, costing $5.7 billion, along the 1,900-mile border.

But many in this city bristle at the prospect of their home becoming a border wall poster child.

Trump said barriers turned El Paso from one of the nation’s most dangerous cities to one of its safest, but critics say that’s not true. El Paso, population around 800,000, had a murder rate less than half the national average in 2005, a year before the most recent expansion of its border fence. That’s despite being just across the border from drug violence-plagued Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

Many residents say El Paso, and the Paso del Norte Bridge linking the city to Mexico, embodies a cross-border spirit that transcends walls rather than proving more are needed.

“The richest of the rich, the poorest of the poor, we all have different reasons for wanting to cross, and people cross every day,” said El Paso City Council member Peter Svarzbein.

El Paso lays bare the mixed feelings the border inspires. Even native Beto O’Rourke, a former Democratic congressma­n who waged an unsuccessf­ul attempt last year to unseat U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, says barriers are inevitable but that Trump’s calls for an expanded wall are the “cynical rhetoric of war, of invasions, of fear.”

O’Rourke will help lead a march tonight opposing the wall with dozens of local civic, human-rights and Hispanic groups at the same time Trump is holding his rally. Organizers expect thousands to turn out.

“While some try to stoke fear and paranoia, to spread lies and a false narrative about the U.S.-Mexico border and to demand a 2,000-mile wall along it at a time of record safety and security, El Paso will come together for a march and celebratio­n that highlights the truth,” O’Rourke said in a statement.

For centuries, virtually nothing but the Rio Grande stood between the city and Juarez. But worsening eco- nomic problems in Mexico increased the flow of immigrants into the United States in the 1970s, prompting Congress to approve chain-link fencing in El Paso and in San Diego dubbed the “Tortilla Curtain.” More barriers were added in the 1990s and in 2006.

Public reaction to the security measures initially was positive in some quarters because it helped reduce vagrancy and petty crime. But many residents now complain that Trump’s demands, and the rust-colored slabs of 18-foot-high metal to replace the fencing, have gone too far, making their home sound like a war zone and offending both them and people from Mexico.

“The border is fluid culturally, economical­ly,” said Cesar Blanco, a Democratic lawmaker who lives a stone’s throw from the wall. “We are a binational community.”

Those who live near the wall say they see few people climbing the barriers now. In fiscal 2017, about 25,000 people were apprehende­d in Border Patrol’s El Paso sector, down from 122,000-plus in fiscal year 2006.

Instead, those crossing illegally now tend to do so outside the city in desolate deserts where deaths from exposure have risen. Democrats argue that electronic sensors and patrols are a more effective answer for additional border security.

The demand for more and bigger walls has become “the supreme symbol of racism,” said Fernando Garcia, executive director of the Border Network for Human Rights in El Paso. “Obviously he’ll have some people attend his rally,” he said of Trump, but “he cannot lie about what we’re about.’”

Many Republican­s, though, insist the low crime rate here is not a coincidenc­e.

“There are regular shootouts near the border, dangerous narcotics trafficked,” said recently elected Republican Congressma­n Chip Roy, who represents a district between Austin and San Antonio that’s about 50 miles from the border at its closest point.

“The good news is that we can stop this,” Roy said in a post-State of the Union fundraisin­g email championin­g a Trump-backed wall.

The FBI’s Uniform Crime Report shows that El Paso’s annual number of reported violent crimes dropped from nearly 5,000 in 1995 to around 2,700 in 2016. But that correspond­ed to similar declines in violent crime nationwide and included times when the city’s crime rates actually increased year-over-year, despite new fencing and walls.

The towering barriers don’t stop Juarez from almost seeming like another neighborho­od in El Paso. Buildings more than a few stories tall in El Paso have sweeping views of downtown Juarez.

Mickie Subia’s single-story home in the historic, downtown Chihuahuit­a neighborho­od is steps from the barrier, providing glimpses of Mexico through fencing and metal slats. She said the wall doesn’t make her feel safer.

“We don’t have a problem with Border Patrol,” Subia said. “We don’t have a problem with anyone coming from over there, either.”

Dee Margo, El Paso’s mayor and a former Republican state lawmaker, tweeted after the State of the Union that his city was “NEVER one of the MOST dangerous cities in the U.S.,” adding that border walls are only partly the reason.

“I’m really glad President Trump is coming here,” he said in a subsequent interview. “I just hope we get a chance to show him what it’s really like on the border.”

 ?? AP/ERIC GAY ?? A new barrier rises last month along the U.S.-Mexico border near downtown El Paso, Texas.
AP/ERIC GAY A new barrier rises last month along the U.S.-Mexico border near downtown El Paso, Texas.

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