Los Angeles Times

Harris lines up help for Central America

The vice president is to announce private investment­s aimed at reducing migration.

- By Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — Vice President Kamala Harris, eager to show progress on one of her most high-profile assignment­s, plans to announce on Monday $540 million in private investment­s in Central America as part of the administra­tion’s plan to reduce migration from the area by improving local conditions.

The announceme­nt, previewed by White House officials on Sunday, will bring total private commitment­s in the region to more than $1.2 billion since May, when Harris began soliciting companies and nonprofits to spend money in Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.

President Biden asked Harris in March to help curb migration from the region by addressing the so-called root causes, which include poverty, corruption, crime and natural disasters. Since then, the number of people stopped by officials near the border has hit record highs. There is debate over the causes, with many conservati­ves blaming lax border enforcemen­t and the perception that the U.S. has become more hospitable to migrants and asylum seekers. Many liberals point to worsening conditions in home countries and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Harris and experts on Central American migration have said her efforts are unlikely to yield quick results. But the large increases in migration have created political problems for the vice president, even if she is not directly responsibl­e for border enforcemen­t or processing migrants.

Her efforts to reduce corruption, at the heart of her plan, have also been set back. Guatemala’s attorney general fired the country’s leading anti-corruption prosecutor Juan Francisco Sandoval in July, just weeks after Harris visited the country and urged leaders to preserve the rule of law.

Harris, who had avoided visiting or speaking with leaders of Honduras and El Salvador because of concerns about government corruption there, has new hope that the incoming president of Honduras, Xiomara Castro, will make good on her promises to fight corruption. Harris called Castro on Saturday to congratula­te her. White House officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, described it as a good call and pointed to Castro’s vows to improve the economy and to better protect women in the country from violence.

Harris plans to announce the new pledges on Monday during a roundtable with corporate leaders, including Brad Smith of Microsoft, Paula Santilli of PepsiCo’s Latin American division, David MacLennan of Cargill, Guillaume Le Cunff of Nespresso and Juan Pablo Mata of Grupo Mariposa, a Guatemala-based food and beverage company.

The biggest new investment will come from PepsiCo, which plans to spend $190 million over the next four years on upgrading plants, expanding distributi­on routes and reducing emissions. Cargill and Parkdale Mills are each pledging $150 million for agricultur­al and manufactur­ing projects.

Microsoft, which had already promised to give 3 million people in the region internet access, will boost its commitment to 4 million people and will also promise to teach digital skills to 100,000 people.

Administra­tion officials hope investment­s from big companies will create more transparen­t business practices.

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