San Diego Union-Tribune

TEXAS BUSES MIGRANTS TO VP’S HOME

More than 110 left at Harris residence in D.C. amid harsh cold

- BY MERYL KORNFIELD, KYLE REMPFER & LIZZIE JOHNSON Kornfield, Rempfer and Johnson write for The Washington Post.

Three buses full of migrants arrived at Vice President Kamala Harris’ residence in Washington from Texas on Christmas Eve amid bitingly cold temperatur­es, a mutual aid group said, the latest in an influx of newcomers sent to the Northeast by Southern states.

About 110 to 130 men, women and children got off the buses outside the Naval Observator­y on Saturday night in 18-degree weather after a two-day journey from South Texas, according to the Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid Network. On the coldest Christmas Eve day on record in the District, some migrants were bundled up in blankets as they were greeted by volunteers who had received word that GOP Texas Gov. Greg Abbott had sent the caravan.

Volunteers scrambled to meet the asylum seekers after the buses, which were scheduled to arrive in New York on Christmas Day, were rerouted due to the winter weather. In a hastily arranged welcoming, a church on Capitol Hill agreed to temporaril­y shelter the group while one of the mutual aid groups, SAMU First Response, arranged 150 breakfasts, lunches and dinners by the restaurant chain Sardis.

“D.C. continues to be welcoming,” the network’s core organizer Amy Fischer said. “Whether it’s Christmas Eve, whether it’s freezing cold outside or warm outside, we are always ready to welcome people with open arms and make sure they have a warm reception in this community.”

Abbott began offering asylum seekers free passage to immigrant-friendly Democratic cities on the East Coast in April, an effort to pressure the Biden administra­tion into cracking down at the border. Other Republican governors, including Arizona’s Doug Ducey and Florida’s Ron DeSantis, have also sent buses to New York and the nation’s capital.

The White House condemned the action in a Christmas Day statement, saying Abbott did not plan with federal authoritie­s before the drop-off.

“Governor Abbott abandoned children on the side of the road in below freezing temperatur­es on Christmas Eve without coordinati­ng with any Federal or local authoritie­s,” White House spokesman Abdullah Hasan said via email to The Washington Post. “This was a cruel, dangerous, and shameful stunt.”

“As we have repeatedly said, we are willing to work with anyone — Republican or Democrat alike — on real solutions, like the comprehens­ive immigratio­n restructur­ing and border security measures President Biden sent to Congress on his first day in office, but these political games accomplish nothing and only put lives in danger,” Hasan said.

Abbott’s office did not respond to requests for comment or confirm publicly that it sent the buses. In a letter sent Tuesday to President Joe Biden, Abbott described conditions at the border, saying Texas cities were unable to house the continued influx of migrants coming in from Mexico. He noted the coming Arctic weather and said the new arrivals were at risk of “freezing to death on city streets.” Temperatur­es in Texas dipped into the teens and 20s in some cities this weekend.

“These communitie­s and the state are ill-equipped to do the job assigned to the federal government — house the thousands of migrants flooding into the country every day,” Abbott said.

Abbott last week deployed the Texas National Guard to try to block migrants from crossing the border at places other than official entry points, which have been essentiall­y closed to many families and individual­s because of a Donald Trump-era policy that allows the United States to quickly send people back across the border without an opportunit­y to apply for asylum.

That policy, known as Title 42, has been successful­ly challenged in court and was set to expire Wednesday, but Chief Justice John Roberts ordered it temporaril­y kept in place while the Supreme Court considers a last-ditch appeal by Abbott and other Republican governors to prevent it from ending.

The Biden administra­tion has said it is working to put new resources and policies in place at the border to deal with the large number of migrants who want to enter the country and seek asylum, a lengthy process that usually allows them to live in the United States and work while they await hearings.

In D.C., the buses had been arriving all week — three from Arizona, another three from Texas — so Tatiana Laborde knew it was going to be an “intense” time. But on Friday, Laborde — who is the managing director of SAMU First Response, one of the agencies along with the mayor’s office and the mutual aid network helping with the migrants — found out about the three rerouted buses. They were scheduled to arrive Sunday morning, Christmas Day.

But then there was another surprise — the buses, from Del Rio, Texas, got in early, parking near the vice president’s Naval Observator­y residence on Christmas Eve.

Most of the migrants on the buses that arrived Saturday came from Central America or the Caribbean, Fischer said.

 ?? WJLA VIA AP ?? Migrant families get on a bus Saturday to transport them from near Vice President Kamala Harris’ residence in Washington — where they arrived after being bused from Texas — to an area church.
WJLA VIA AP Migrant families get on a bus Saturday to transport them from near Vice President Kamala Harris’ residence in Washington — where they arrived after being bused from Texas — to an area church.

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