Santa Fe New Mexican

Biden, in call with Mexico president, seeks help in averting crisis at border

- By Zolan Kanno-Youngs

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Monday sought help from President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico in averting a new crisis at the border, hoping for diplomatic cooperatio­n from one of the key supporters of the harsh tactics imposed by Biden’s predecesso­r to choke off immigratio­n.

López Obrador won the admiration of President Donald Trump for cooperatin­g with his hard-line immigratio­n agenda, and the Mexican president praised Trump during a call with Biden, then the president-elect, in December.

Facing an uptick of illegal migrant crossings at some parts of the southweste­rn border, Biden is now hoping López Obrador will become a partner in preventing another cycle of outof-control migration from Central America, but that he will do so without resorting to the full range of policies Trump embraced. The Mexican president appeared open to collaborat­ion, issuing a joint statement committing to address climate change, the pandemic and migration north.

Despite campaignin­g against Trump’s policies, Biden wants one of the same things from the Mexican president that his predecesso­r did: help in keeping Central American migrants from immediatel­y surging north toward the United States through Mexico.

While Biden has presented himself as breaking sharply with Trump administra­tion immigratio­n policies, he has abandoned only some. The president has recently begun welcoming back to the United States a limited number of asylum-seekers who were exposed to violence and kidnapping­s in dangerous areas of Mexico under a Trump-era program. But the Biden administra­tion has kept in place a separate Trump policy that empowers agents to rapidly expel new arrivals at the border to Mexican authoritie­s as Biden hopes to avoid a crisis that challenged his predecesso­rs.

Both policies were accepted by López Obrador with little resistance when they were first imposed by Trump.

López Obrador recently called for a new guest worker program for Mexicans and Central Americans in the United States, although Biden’s press secretary said Monday the move would require legislatio­n from Congress. But while Trump initially threatened Mexico with tariffs and a shutdown of the border to win cooperatio­n with his immigratio­n agenda, Biden heaped praise on López Obrador on Monday. Biden has also signaled that he is eager to open the U.S.-Mexico border to full trade when the pandemic allows it to happen.

“The United States and Mexico are stronger when we stand together,” Biden said at the beginning of a virtual meeting with the Mexican president, while acknowledg­ing that the countries have not been “perfect” neighbors. He said that during the Obama administra­tion, “we looked at Mexico as an equal — you are equal.”

Before the meeting, Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the Homeland Security secretary, denounced what he called the “depths of cruelty” of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n philosophy, telling reporters that the separation of families at the border was “the most powerful and heartbreak­ing example” of Trump’s assault on the immigratio­n system.

But even as Biden seeks to unwind those policies, Mayorkas acknowledg­ed that the United States continued to rely, for now, on a measure at the heart of Trump’s approach: a public health rule that requires border agents to quickly deport border crossers to Mexico without a chance to request asylum.

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