Houston Chronicle

Illegal border crossings fell in January

U.S. officials point to tighter rules for people from 4 nations

- By Nick Miroff

Tighter restrictio­ns applied by the Biden administra­tion against migrants from Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua and Haiti along the southern border last month led to a precipitou­s drop in the number of people from those countries crossing into the United States illegally, according to three administra­tion officials and preliminar­y data.

Illegal crossings by migrants from the four countries were down more than 95 percent, preliminar­y figures obtained by the Washington Post show.

Overall, the number of migrants stopped along the Mexico border last month fell to about 150,000, down from the recordhigh 251,487 tallied in December, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data and officials who were not authorized to discuss enforcemen­t figures not yet finalized.

On Jan. 5, Biden officials announced moves to quickly expel 30,000 migrants per month from those four nations back across the border to Mexico, expanding their use of the Title 42 public health policy enforced since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The Biden administra­tion offset the enforcemen­t push by a major expansion of programs known as parole, allowing migrants from the four nations to enter the United States legally if they have a U.S. sponsor and complete an online applicatio­n.

Biden officials are offering up to 30,000 migrants per month a two-year permit to live and work in the United States under the terms of the program, and say such legal pathways are successful­ly steering migrants toward a safer and more orderly option than the one offered by predacious smugglers.

About 6,000 Cubans, Haitians and Nicaraguan­s have been allowed into the United States through the new parole program since Jan. 5, according to the latest figures. A similar program offered to Venezuelan­s has resulted in more than 15,000 entering the country since it was launched in October, data show.

Department of Homeland Security Sec. Alejandro Mayorkas promoted the administra­tion’s carrot-and-stick approach in a speech Monday in Miami. “This is the model that this administra­tion is committed to implementi­ng to build safe and lawful pathways for individual­s who are seeking humanitari­an relief in the United States,” he said.

Mayorkas’ remarks came after a group of 20 states led by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed suit in U.S. District Court on Jan. 24, saying Biden’s expanded use of parole authority is unlawful. The plaintiffs say parole authority is meant to be used sparingly on a case-by-case basis, and not as a way to an alternativ­e visa system.

“This unlawful amnesty program, which will invite hundreds of thousands of aliens into the U.S. every year, will only make this immigratio­n crisis drasticall­y worse,” Paxton said in a statement.

Biden officials say the enforcemen­t component of the Jan. 5 deal with Mexico was contingent on a U.S. commitment to accept more migrants from the four nations through legal channels. If the Republican­s’ lawsuit successful­ly blocks the parole expansion, administra­tion officials say, it would imperil the tighter border controls and potentiall­y unleash another migration surge.

“It is incomprehe­nsible to me why this lawsuit was filed when in fact it addresses the challenge that we have been encounteri­ng at our southern border,” Mayorkas said in his speech. “Why these states would oppose an enforcemen­t program that is proving successful is beyond my comprehens­ion.”

The threat of expulsion to Mexico appears to have produced a dramatic swing since December, when thousands of Venezuelan­s, Cubans and Nicaraguan­s were crossing per day into El Paso, maxing out shelter space and leaving families sleeping on the streets in the bitter cold.

U.S. border agents encountere­d as many as 3,500 illegal entries per day by migrants from those countries prior to the holidays. That number has fallen into double-digits recently, with U.S. agents arresting fewer than 50 migrants daily from those countries several times during the past week, officials said.

January has historical­ly been a slower month for illegal crossings, as some migrants forestall their journeys until after the holidays and profession­al smugglers take time off. January was the least-busy month of 2022, during a year when CBP officials made nearly 2.4 million arrests, eclipsing the previous high of 1.7 million set during Biden’s first year in office.

The record migration surge from Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba during the past 18 months has presented Homeland Security officials with significan­t logistical challenges. All three nations are under U.S. economic sanctions, and strained diplomatic relations with their government­s severely limiting DHS authoritie­s’ ability to carry out deportatio­n flights.

Mexican authoritie­s have invited migrants who are expelled from the United States to seek humanitari­an protection in Mexico, but they also have more latitude to make deportatio­ns to Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba.

One Cuban asylum-seeker who arrived in the U.S. through Mexico and was sent back across the border last month told the Univision network that Mexican authoritie­s promptly placed him on a deportatio­n flight to Havana.

Moisés Izquierdo, 44, told the network his advice to other would-be border-crossers trying to reach the United States was “don’t even try it.”

“Don’t put yourself in the hands of a coyote,” he told the network, using the term for a smuggler, in a statement that echoed the Biden administra­tion’s public messaging campaigns.

U.S. officials continue to face numerous other challenges at the southern border. Mexican nationals once more rank at the top of illegal border crossers, with many seeking to evade capture and returning repeatedly if they are expelled under Title 42. CBP is detaining record numbers of migrants from Colombia, Ecuador and other nations whose citizens are generally not accepted by Mexican authoritie­s under the public health policy.

In recent years, migration levels have typically rebounded during the spring months when seasonal hiring picks up on U.S. farms and in other industries.

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