The Boston Globe

Mexico may accept more migrants expelled by US

Nation’s leader meets with Biden and Trudeau

- By Colleen Long and Maria Verza

MEXICO CITY — President Andres Manuel López Obrador of Mexico said Monday in the leadup to this week’s summit of North American leaders that he would consider accepting more migrants than previously announced under President Biden’s plan to turn away people from four nations who cross illegally into the United States.

“We don’t want to anticipate things, but this is part of what we are going to talk about at the summit,” López Obrador said. “We support this type of measures, to give people options, alternativ­es,” he said, adding that “the numbers may be increased.”

Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, cautioned that nothing was decided yet.

“What we need is to see how the program announced last week works in practice, what if any adjustment­s need to be made to that program and then we can talk about taking the next steps,” he said.

The comments were a reflection of the highly sensitive negotiatio­ns about migration, which will be a central issue during the two-day summit involving Biden, López Obrador, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada.

All three nations are struggling to handle an influx of people arriving in North America, as well as crack down on smugglers who profit from persuading migrants to make the dangerous trip to the United States.

Other issues on the table include climate change, energy, and supply chains.

Sullivan said Monday the trip would be “a good opportunit­y for President Biden to deepen his personal engagement with President López Obrador and Prime Minister Trudeau.”

Ahead of the summit, Biden announced a major shift in migration policy, which had been negotiated with Mexico. Under the plan, the United States will send 30,000 migrants per month from Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti, and Venezuela back across the border from among those who entered the United States illegally. Migrants who arrive from those four countries are not easily returned to their home countries for a variety of reasons.

In addition, 30,000 people per month from those four nations who get sponsors, background checks, and an airline flight to the United States will get the ability to work legally in the country for two years.

Biden arrived in Mexico on Sunday night via the new Felipe Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, a prized project of the Mexican president. The hub was christened last year with fanfare, though it’s more than an hour’s drive north of the city center, has few flights, and until recently lacked consistent drinking water.

The two leaders took the long drive into the city center in Biden’s limousine. López Obrador was fascinated by the presidenti­al vehicle known as “the beast,” and said Biden showed it off to him.

“He himself showed me how the buttons work,” López Obrador said.

The Mexican president described the two leaders’ first encounter of the trip as “very pleasant,” and he said, “President Biden is a friendly person.”

It was a notably warm comment given that the men’s relationsh­ip has been merely transactio­nal at best and absent the warmth and camaraderi­e Biden has with some other world leaders.

On his way to Mexico, Biden stopped in El Paso for four hours — his first trip to the border as president and the longest he’s spent along the US-Mexico line. The visit was highly controlled and seemed designed to counter Republican claims of a crisis situation by showcasing a smooth operation to process migrants entering legally, weed out smuggled contraband, and humanely treat those who’ve entered illegally.

But the trip was likely to do little to quell critics from both sides, including immigrant advocates who accuse the Democratic president of establishi­ng cruel policies not unlike those of his hard-line predecesso­r, Republican Donald Trump.

The number of migrants crossing the US-Mexico border has risen dramatical­ly during Biden’s first two years in office. There were more than 2.38 million stops during the year that ended Sept. 30, the first time the number topped 2 million.

López Obrador will formally welcome Biden at the Palacio Nacional later Monday, the first time since 2014 that Mexico has hosted a US president. The two leaders will meet together ahead of a private dinner for all three leaders and their wives. Biden and Trudeau will hold their own talks Tuesday, and then the three leaders will gather for the main summit discussion­s.

Jill Biden arrived separately in Mexico. On Monday, she met with women from the fields of education, art, and business, most of them recipients of US cooperatio­n programs or scholarshi­ps.

“Do whatever you want but teach others,” she said as she encouraged the women to work together and support others.

For the United States, the major summit talking points are migration, drug traffickin­g, and building on Biden’s push on electric vehicles and manufactur­ing. Mexico is focused on economic integratio­n for North America, supporting the poor in the Americas, and regional relationsh­ips that put all government­s on equal footing.

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