Houston Chronicle

Pence rejects ousting Trump

President touts his legacy as supporters, protesters turn out

- By JeremyWall­ace

HIDALGOCOU­NTY — President Donald Trump sought refuge in SouthTexas on Tuesday, brushing off threats of impeachmen­t and calls for his resignatio­n following last week’s storming of the U.S. Capitol by his supporters.

During his first speech since those riots in Washington, D.C., Trump briefly spoke out against the violence that left five people dead, including a police officer, and trashed the U.S. Capitol.

“We believe in respecting America’s history and traditions, not tearing them down,” Trump said. “We believe in the rule of law and not in violence or rioting.”

But Trump’s visit had the region on edge on Tuesday.

Hundreds of Trump’s supporters organized a “Trump Train” in a show of solidarity, and critics of the president warned his appearance so close to last week’s violencewa­s a danger to the community. Some Democrats were warning their supporters to stay away from Trump’s route to prevent clashes.

“He’s just bringing trouble,” said Santos Chavarria, a 59-yearold resident of nearby Mission.

Chavarria was among dozens who gathered at a protest rally a fewmiles froma section of border wall south of Pharr where Trump delivered his speech. Chavarria said that instead of talking about his divisive border wall, Trump should be helping fight COVID-19, which has ravaged Hidalgo County. More than 1,900 people have died from the disease in the county of about 870,000 people. That’s more deaths than all but two Texas counties: Harris and Dallas.

Chavarria said he would sleep better at night once Trump is out of office.

Others, including U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela, D-Harlingen, pleaded with Trump to cancel his visit, saying it was just too dangerous given the mood of the nation.

“The president should cancel this trip and focus on bringing harmony to this country in his waning days,” Vela said before Trump arrived.

Belying accusation­s that Trump’s popularity rests mainly with white, working-class voters, the crowd awaiting the president on the border Tuesday was heavily Mexican American. While wellwisher­s had driven in from elsewhere, many in the crowd identified themselves as being from McAllen and other nearby border towns.

‘We got it done’

Although the general public was kept away from where Trump spoke, hundreds lined the roads near where he was speaking in hopes of catching a glimpse of the president near the border wall.

“It’s his legacy,” said Teresa Dial, who retired to Pharr two years ago and was part of a group that gathered just outside the security perimeter where Trump was speaking.

Dial said concerns that Tuesday’s events could spark another round of violence were ridiculous. She said she had no concerns that there would be any trouble.

Michigan resident Jim Bloomfield, another Trump supporter, said the president has taken way too much criticism from the media and should get more credit for building the wall and other accomplish­ments.

“Everything he said he was going to do, he did it,” said Bloomfield, who changed plans for his vacation in Brownsvill­e when he learned Trump was going to be nearby.

For Trump, the two-hour stop in South Texas was a chance to highlight what he sees as one of his biggest accomplish­ments.

“We worked long and hard to get this done,” Trump told the small group of supporters and border patrol agents at the base of a section of newly constructe­d wall. “They said it couldn’t be done. And we got it done.”

But as much as Trump wanted to tout the wall as an example of a “promise made, promise kept” as the White House declared, much

of the constructi­on near where he stood remains incomplete, leaving large gaps in a 10-mile stretch on either side.

When Trump ran for the White House in 2015, he promised a wall from Texas to California — more than 1,900 miles that would be paid for by Mexico. Instead, the Trump administra­tion has mostly refurbishe­d existing walls and fences and added only about 30 miles of barriers where there previously had not been any. Mexico did not pay for any of it.

The Trump administra­tion says 450 miles of border wall have been built during his administra­tion.

Melissa Cigarroa, a landowner along the border near Laredo who is also an activist with the No Border Wall Coalition, said constructi­on crews are working faster now as they try to get as much wall built as possible before Joe Biden can take office, hoping that the new president won’ t tear it down.

“Not one more foot,” she said is her message to the Biden administra­tion.

Trump made clear he’s worried about what Biden will do.

“We can’t let the next administra­tion even think about taking it down,” Trump said.

And as he did earlier in his administra­tion, he warned of caravans of immigrants from Central and South America looking for “the gravy train” who are heading to the border already in anticipati­on of his tough policies being reversed.

“If our border security measures are reversed, it will trigger a tidal wave of illegal immigratio­n,” he said.

‘Lost fair and square’

Critics say the real damage has been the border wall and Trump’s immigratio­n policies as a whole.

“The border wall constructi­on work has done irreparabl­e harm to the environmen­t, Indigenous people, and communitie­s along the southern border,” said Frankie Miranda, president and CEO of the nonprofit Hispanic Federation.

Trump’s damage goes beyond just the wall, said Astrid Dominguez, director of the Border Rights Center with the Texas American Civil Liberties Union.

“Trump brought our asylum system to a halt, separated children from their parents, destroyed protected lands to further border wall constructi­on, and emboldened CBP (Customs and Border Patrol) agents to operate with impunity,” Dominguez said.

While Trump made the border wall a top priority from his first days in office, he never had full support from Congress on it. After Congress refused to give the White House $5 billion for the constructi­on of the wall, Trump turned to using past Defense Department appropriat­ions to cover some constructi­on. Almost $10 billion was diverted from Pentagon programs in 2019 and 2020, a controvers­ial transfer that has been challenged in federal lawsuits.

Trump’s stop in Texas marked his 18th time visiting the state. Only eight states have seen Trump more than Texas.

In visiting Hidalgo County, Trump was in one of the Texas counties where he did the worst in the November election. Biden beat Trump in the county by 17 percentage points.

Trump carried Starr and Zapata counties, lightly populated border regions upriver from McAllen.

“The election was lost fair and square, I suppose, but I’m here to support the president,” said Emede Tovar, 36, who had driven 60 miles fromanothe­r border city with his wife and young daughter. “I wanted my daughter to see him. We’re here to say hi and bye.”

Several other Trump supporters pointed out that the president has never used the word “concede” in agreeing to a change in the White House. They insisted that Biden would somehow be removed from office in short order, perhaps leading to Trump’s return to power.

“I hope he is able to continue carrying the movement forward,” said Joe Garcia, 47, a middle school teacher. “What he stands for are conservati­ve values, against abortion, against the illegals taking all the benefits, for making America great again. That’s what I like.”

 ?? Doug Mills / New York Times ?? President Donald Trump tours a portion of the border wall near Alamo. The House plans to vote today on an article of impeachmen­t.
Doug Mills / New York Times President Donald Trump tours a portion of the border wall near Alamo. The House plans to vote today on an article of impeachmen­t.
 ?? Mark Felix / AFP via Getty Images ?? Supporters of President Donald Trump and counterpro­testers face off Tuesday in McAllen. Trump, in South Texas to tour the border wall, warned of a “tidal wave” of illegal immigrants heading to the U.S. in anticipati­on of his policies being reversed.
Mark Felix / AFP via Getty Images Supporters of President Donald Trump and counterpro­testers face off Tuesday in McAllen. Trump, in South Texas to tour the border wall, warned of a “tidal wave” of illegal immigrants heading to the U.S. in anticipati­on of his policies being reversed.

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