Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Guatemalan president visits the White House

- COLLEEN LONG AND CHRIS MEGERIAN

WASHINGTON — Vice President Kamala Harris welcomed Bernardo Arévalo, the newly elected president of Guatemala, to the White House on Monday to praise his battle against corruption and promote their work on stemming migration from Central America.

“Your leadership can help rebuild the Guatemalan people’s trust in their institutio­ns, and give them a sense of hope and opportunit­y,” Harris said.

President Joe Biden met privately afterward with Arévalo to congratula­te him on his inaugurati­on, the White House said later Monday. They discussed good governance, effective migration management, the importance of upholding democracy and other issues, the White House said.

The Democratic vice president announced that her efforts to address the root causes of migration by improving economic opportunit­y in the region have generated $5.2 billion in private sector commitment­s.

“The problems, of course, did not occur overnight, and the solutions will not be achieved overnight,” Harris said. But there has been short-term progress, she said.

Migrants from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras — an area known as the Northern Triangle — have long made the journey north to the U.S.-Mexico border. Successive administra­tions have struggled to manage the flow of migrants, and it’s become a humanitari­an and political challenge for Biden during this year’s election. Both Democrats and Republican­s in Congress say the nation’s immigratio­n system is broken, but efforts by lawmakers to address the problems have failed.

Harris and Arévalo discussed the Biden administra­tion’s use of so-called “safe mobility offices,” which were set up in Guatemala, Colombia, Costa Rica and Ecuador in the fall, among other immigratio­n matters. The safe mobility offices are designed to streamline the U.S. refugee process so migrants apply where they are and avoid paying smugglers to make the journey north.

The number of arrests for illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border nudged upward in February over the previous month to 140,644, although it was still among the lowest monthly tallies in Biden’s presidency. Of those, 23,216 were Guatemalan.

Arévalo took office in January after winning the presidency in August, beating the establishm­ent candidate by a comfortabl­e margin.

He is the son of a former president credited with implementi­ng some of Guatemala’s key labor protection­s, but his strong showing in a crowded field was still a shock.

The politician with a background in academia and conflict resolution caught fire with a message of challengin­g the country’s entrenched power structure and resuming the fight against corruption.

“Your election has brought a sense of of optimism to the people of America and around the world,” Harris said. “And despite the challenges that have been posed to Guatemala’s democratic process, the United States was proud to stand with you, Mr. President, following a free and fair election.”

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