The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Harris releases strategy to tackle migration

- By Elliot Spagat

Vice President Kamala Harris said Thursday that efforts to address root causes of migration from three Central American countries won’t produce immediate results, as she unveiled a broad strategy that expands on principles the Biden administra­tion previously outlined.

Harris said the United States alone cannot tackle deep-seated motives for people to leave Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, including corruption, violence and poverty. The government­s of Mexico, Japan and South Korea, along with the United Nations, have committed to joining the push, she said without elaboratin­g.

The plan, which avoids deadlines, supports shortterm relief for migration pressures like extreme weather, while committing sustained attention to longterm motivation­s for people to leave their countries.

“We will build on what works, and we will pivot away from what does not work,” Harris wrote in the introducti­on to the 20-page plan. “It will not be easy, and progress will not be instantane­ous, but we are committed to getting it right.”

Harris noted that she recently traveled to Guatemala, “where one of the largest challenges is corruption.”

On Tuesday, the Biden administra­tion said it suspended cooperatio­n with Guatemala’s Attorney General’s Office after the firing of the agency’s top anti-corruption prosecutor, saying it “lost confidence” in the country’s willingnes­s to fight corruption.

The White House also released a Collaborat­ive Migration Management Strategy, which President Joe Biden ordered in February to outline how the United States will work with other countries to address migration flows. The 14-page document summarizes earlier announceme­nts and espouses goals that Biden and top aides have outlined before. They include expanding protection­s and job opportunit­ies in countries where people are leaving, formulatin­g more legal pathways to come to the United States, and fostering “secure and humane management of borders.”

Harris’ task, which Biden assumed when he was President Barack Obama’s vice president, is enormous in scope and complexity, and the administra­tion has struggled for short- and long-term responses.

U.S. border authoritie­s reported large numbers of arrivals at the Mexican border in June, with significan­t increases in people arriving in families and children traveling alone. The trend appears to be continuing in July, when soaring temperatur­es often deter people from coming.

Five hundred nine migrants from Central and South America turned themselves in Monday night in Hidalgo, Texas, hours after another group of 336 migrants was encountere­d nearby, said Brian Hastings, the Border Patrol sector chief in Rio Grande Valley, the busiest corridor for illegal crossings.

On Monday, the Department of Homeland Security said it resumed fast-track deportatio­ns, known as expedited removals, for “certain” families that don’t express fear of being returned home. While it never announced a suspension, many families that enter the country illegally have been getting released in the United States with orders to appear in immigratio­n court or report to immigratio­n authoritie­s.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Vice President Kamala Harris said it will take time to address the root causes of migration from three Central American countries.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Vice President Kamala Harris said it will take time to address the root causes of migration from three Central American countries.

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