Rome News-Tribune

DeSantis silent on what state will do about migrants in South Florida, says ‘stay tuned’

- By Ana Ceballos

Gov. Ron DeSantis is aware that hundreds of Cubans and Haitians have been arriving in South Florida by boat in recent weeks, but he is not saying what his administra­tion — one that has embraced hardline immigratio­n policies — plans to do about it.

The Keys, and South Florida, have seen a jump in migrant arrivals in recent years, but incidents have spiked in the last few months. Since Christmas alone, almost 500 Cubans and 130 Haitians have arrived in South Florida, overwhelmi­ng local authoritie­s and raising fears of a mass migration event.

In response, DeSantis’ office is telling the public to “stay tuned” on what he plans to do about the issue.

“We are aware of this situation and presently working on it,” DeSantis’ press secretary Bryan Griffin said in an email.

The situation is forcing DeSantis to contend with the hard-line immigratio­n policies he has put in place — which among other things would allow the state to relocate migrants in South Florida out of the state — and the ideologica­l rifts that exists within

South Florida’s politicall­y powerful Cuban American community.

Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez — a Cuban-American Republican from Miami — was caught in the cross hairs of those political dynamics last August, when she suggested that Cubans who were in Florida “illegally” would be bused out of the state.

After facing criticism, Nuñez said her comments were intentiona­lly twisted by Democrats and added that there was a difference between being a “political” refugee and immigrants who are coming into the country for “economic reasons.”

At the time, DeSantis defended Nuñez and said the state planned to relocate migrants who arrived in the country illegally, not refugees.

DeSantis’ office on Thursday did not respond when asked whether the state would seek to relocate any of the migrants — mostly Cubans and Haitians — who have arrived in South Florida in recent weeks.

But in a statement, his office said the governor remains “committed to acting within his power to shield Florida from the disastrous effects of President Biden’s abdication of his responsibi­lity to secure our nation’s borders.”

DeSantis, who is eyeing a potential 2024 White House run, has repeatedly turned to the issue of immigratio­n to criticize the Biden administra­tion, a move that has endeared the Republican governor to the GOP base.

In his inaugural speech on Tuesday, DeSantis said the federal government’s immigratio­n policies have made “a mockery of the rule of law.”

The governor, however, has not commented on a series of new immigratio­n policy measure announced by the Biden administra­tion on Thursday.

Biden announced that his administra­tion will dramatical­ly expedite the expulsion of Cubans, Haitians and Nicaraguan­s back to Mexico if they cross the U.S. border illegally.

The U.S. will also significan­tly expand a parole program for citizens of those three countries so they can live and work in the country for two years if they have a sponsor.

According to official data, almost 225,000 Cubans arrived in the United States in 2022, an exodus larger than the 1980 Mariel boatlift, when 125,000 arrived in Florida.

In November, U.S. Customs and Border Protection had 35,849 encounters with Cuban nationals nationwide, mainly at the border with Mexico, a figure higher than in any month in fiscal year 2022.

 ?? Carl Juste/Miami Herald/TNS ?? Cuban migrants sit on the floor while waiting to be processed. On Dec. 4, about 40 men, women and some small children entered the next stage in their migration from Cuba to the United States Wednesday when they were processed by the Border Patrol at the agency’s station in the Middle Florida Keys city of Marathon. They were among hundreds of people from Cuba, and one large group of over 100 men and women from Haiti, who have landed across the island chain since the end of last week.
Carl Juste/Miami Herald/TNS Cuban migrants sit on the floor while waiting to be processed. On Dec. 4, about 40 men, women and some small children entered the next stage in their migration from Cuba to the United States Wednesday when they were processed by the Border Patrol at the agency’s station in the Middle Florida Keys city of Marathon. They were among hundreds of people from Cuba, and one large group of over 100 men and women from Haiti, who have landed across the island chain since the end of last week.

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