Los Angeles Times

MEETING ON MIGRATION

Vice President Kamala Harris spoke with Mexican President López Obrador.

- BY NOAH BIERMAN AND TRACY WILKINSON

WASHINGTON — Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador sharply criticized U.S. aid to a group in his country hours before he met virtually on Friday with Vice President Kamala Harris, underscori­ng the difficulty of her mission to get his help with immigratio­n issues.

López Obrador singled out America’s funding for a nongovernm­ental group in Mexico that fights corruption and frequently criticizes his administra­tion, reflecting his broader campaign against voices of opposition, including political dissidents and journalist­s.

Yet the Biden administra­tion is relying on independen­t anti-corruption and humanitari­an groups as part of a wider strategy in Mexico and Central America to rebuild civil society and address poverty and violence, which they believe will help discourage people from making the dangerous journey north from Central America through Mexico to the United States.

By criticizin­g the American aid before the meeting, López Obrador risked embarrassi­ng Harris at a highprofil­e moment — their first one-on-one meeting in her role as President Biden’s diplomatic emissary on the migration issue — and disrupting the administra­tion’s strategy just a month before her first trip to Latin America, specifical­ly to Mexico and Guatemala.

Harris’ office did not comment on the late wrinkle and whether it would change her strategy.

The two leaders smiled and exchanged cordial remarks during the opening of their meeting before reporters were ushered out, with Harris emphasizin­g their nations’ shared values of dignity, respect and the family bonds.

“This partnershi­p, I believe, couldn’t be more important today. Our nations face serious challenges,” Harris said, citing the COVID-19 pandemic, its economic repercussi­ons and the surge of Central American migrants at the U.S.Mexico border.

“We must fight violence. We must fight corruption and impunity,” she said, adding that it is in both countries’ interest to improve conditions in Central America, and to bring nations beyond the Americas to join the effort, so that people will not want to leave their homelands.

López Obrador was conciliato­ry in his public remarks to Harris.

“We have so many things in common,” he said, “and we are in agreement when it comes to the policies that you are undertakin­g when it comes to migration, and we will help.”

In a statement following the meeting, Harris said the two countries had agreed to share informatio­n to combat migrant smuggling and human traffickin­g and to “bring together law enforcemen­t from both nations to dismantle criminal networks” while protecting human rights.

Her statement said the United States is committed to economic developmen­t projects in the region that protect the right of workers to organize unions, reflecting a change in emphasis from the Trump administra­tion, which seldom weighed in on issues related to human rights and workers as part of diplomatic relations.

In a tweet, López Obrador said the two leaders spoke “in friendly terms.” “We are committed to working together to find efficient, humane and just actions [to deal with] the migration phenomenon,” he wrote.

Earlier, in his daily news conference, López Obrador announced that his government had sent a diplomatic protest note to the U.S. government “asking for an explanatio­n” of U.S. aid to Mexicanos Contra la Corrupcion, an anti-corruption group.

“This is deplorable that a group opposed to our government, that was dedicated to blocking all the public works we were carrying out ... be given this financing by a foreign government,” López Obrador said.

He sought to portray the U.S. contributi­on as underhande­d. However, such financing to civil society groups is typical of the work done by the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

The anti-corruption group has denounced numerous projects and policies in Mexico, including the government’s troubled handling of the pandemic and the reportedly shoddy constructi­on of a Mexico City subway line that collapsed Monday, killing more than 20 people.

Andrew Selee, president of the nonpartisa­n Migration Policy Institute in Washington, said Mexico’s leader was “trying to distract from a domestic crisis of the subway that collapsed, as well as trying to have some leverage in negotiatio­ns” with Harris.

López Obrador’s disdain for anti-corruption groups echoes complaints from anti-democratic leaders in Turkey, India and elsewhere, Selee said, adding, “It is sort of the playbook of leaders who are uncomforta­ble with civil society.”

Harris’ meeting with López Obrador was her second in two weeks with the head of a Latin American country. She met virtually last week with Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei and promised $310 million in additional aid to the country, part of a larger effort to increase humanitari­an assistance and help rebuild society in the so-called Northern Triangle countries, which also include Honduras and El Salvador.

Harris, who spoke by phone with López Obrador last month, announced on Wednesday that she would visit Mexico and Guatemala on June 7-8, her first foreign trip as vice president and her most significan­t gesture since Biden tapped her in March to oversee the diplomatic response to the influx of Central American migrants at the southern border.

Her assignment, which the administra­tion defines as addressing the root causes of migration in the region, such as poverty, violence and corruption, is her most high-profile solo job and carries significan­t domestic political implicatio­ns.

Republican­s have been hammering the administra­tion over immigratio­n, an issue for which Biden’s poll numbers are significan­tly weaker than those for his handling of the pandemic and the economy.

As Harris visited Wisconsin on Tuesday to sell the administra­tion’s legislativ­e agenda, Republican leaders in the state said she should have instead gone to the border. Administra­tion officials, however, say that is not part of Harris’ purview.

The administra­tion sees government­al corruption, gangs and drug cartels as major obstacles to rebuilding civil society, discouragi­ng migration north and distributi­ng humanitari­an aid dollars in Central America, especially in El Salvador and Honduras. Notably, Harris has no known plans to meet with the leaders of those two countries.

In a speech Tuesday, Harris denounced El Salvador’s government, which moved over the weekend to dismiss five judges on the nation’s Constituti­onal Court, a vote seen by critics in the U.S. and other countries as a power grab by President Nayib Bukele.

“An independen­t judiciary is critical to a healthy democracy and a strong economy,” Harris said in the speech from the White House to the virtual Washington Conference on the Americas. “On this front, on every front, we must respond.”

Asked about those comments, Harris said she is “taking into account the challenges that have long existed, and continue to exist, around corruption in the region and the challenges that that creates in terms of a return on the investment.”

‘This partnershi­p, I believe, couldn’t be more important today. Our nations face serious challenges. ... We must fight violence. We must fight corruption and impunity.’ — Vice President Kamala Harris, on U.S. relations with Mexico

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ??
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris hosts a virtual meeting on Friday with President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico to discuss Latin America.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris hosts a virtual meeting on Friday with President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico to discuss Latin America.

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