Border czar Kamala SKIPS crisis meeting with Mexican president to
visit a daycare center and bakery in NJ and sends Secretary of State
Blinken in her place
By Reuters and Daily Mail
October 9, 2021
Kamala: I can't be bothered with that silly meeting in Mexico. I'll go and play with some kids and send Blinky instead
Border czar Kamala Harris skipped a
high-level meeting with Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
Friday to discuss the migrant crisis at the US's southern border - to
visit a daycare center in New Jersey instead.
The
vice president, who was put in charge of tackling the border crisis by
Joe Biden back in March, delegated the thorny meeting in Mexico's
capital to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
Blinken
was joined by Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and US Attorney General
Merrick Garland and US Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar in efforts to
mend America's fractious ties with Mexico.
As officials from the two nations worked
hashed out a new security cooperation accord and deal with a surge in
migration across the border, Harris was nowhere to be seen.
Instead,
Harris spent the day in New Jersey where she played bingo with kids at a
daycare center, stopped by a vaccination site and even had time to
sample some cake at a Newark bakery.
The
vice president has repeatedly come under fire from Republicans over her
handling of the migrant crisis, ever since she was tapped by Biden as
America's border czar.
Harris was especially slammed for her failure to visit the border to see the state of affairs for herself.
She
finally bowed to pressure and visited the border at El Paso, Texas, in
June. It is the only time she's been to the border since taking office.
Border czar Kamala Harris skipped a
high-level meeting with Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
Friday to discuss the migrant crisis at the US's southern border - to
visit a daycare center in New Jersey instead (pictured Harris at the
daycare)
The vice president appeared to have
worked up an appetite as she then stopped by cake shop Tonnie's Minis
where she was joined by Senator Cory Booker
On her New Jersey day trip, Harris visited
the Ben Samuels Child Care Center at Montclair State University in
Little Falls where she met with students and teachers.
The
vice president, who was joined by Governor Phil Murphy and
Congresswoman Mikie Sherrill, stopped by several classrooms to meet kids
and joined in with a game of shapes bingo.
She then joined a group of educators for a roundtable about the importance of supporting working parents.
Harris
then headed to a COVID-19 vaccination site at Essex County Community
College in Newark to thank healthcare workers and encourage people to
get the shot.
The vice president appeared to have worked up an appetite as she then
stopped by cake shop Tonnie's Minis where she was joined by Senator Cory
Booker.
Harris bought red velvet cupcakes and slices of carrot, pineapple coconut and chocolate-covered sponge cake.
Meanwhile, Blinken
was taken on a mural tour of the National Palace by Lopez Obrador
before the two delegations had a working breakfast.
They
were joined at the crisis meeting by Garland, Salazar, Mexican Foreign
Minister Marcelo Ebrard and Secretary of Public Security and Citizen
Protection of Mexico Rosa Icela Rodriguez.
The vice president joined in with a
game of shapes bingo with kids at the Ben Samuels Children's Center at Montclair State University and then joined a group of educators for
a roundtable about the importance of supporting working parents
Harris then headed to Tonnie's
Minis cake shop in Newark, New Jersey, where she bought red velvet
cupcakes and slices of carrot, pineapple coconut and chocolate-covered
sponge cake
Blinken said Lopez Obrador's earlier comments were 'exactly in line' with what Biden has in mind for the US-Mexico relationship.
'I'm
very inspired by the vision you expressed. The work now we have to do
to translate that into reality, into truly a transformational
partnership, a shared responsibility,' Blinken said at the start of the
breakfast meeting.
Mayorkas tweeted that the meeting represented an 'important new phase' in the partnership between the nations.
'Today's High-Level Security Dialogue marks an important new phase in the US-Mexico security partnership,' Mayorkas tweeted.
'We
will work together under a new framework to guide our joint efforts,
and work toward our shared goals of security and prosperity for our two
nations'.
Blinken's visit is part of
the Biden administration's first US-Mexico High-Level Security Dialogue,
in which the two countries will negotiate a sweeping new agreement on
how to tackle everything from drug flows to the United States to the
smuggling of US-made guns into Mexico.
It comes at a time when the Biden
administration is increasingly reliant on its southern neighbor to stem
the flow of Latin American migrants heading to the United States.
US-Mexico
relations suffered a major blow last October when US anti-narcotics
agents arrested Mexican former defense minister Salvador Cienfuegos,
outraging the Mexican government.
Cienfuegos was freed, but the detention strained relations and hurt security cooperation.
US
officials are touting the new security accord as broader than the
previous agreement, the Merida Initiative, under which the US channeled
about $3.3 billion to help Mexico fight crime.
Launched
in 2007, the Merida Initiative initially provided military equipment
for Mexican forces and later helped train Mexico's security forces and
the judiciary.
The vice president delegated the thorny meeting in Mexico's capital (above) to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken
But Lopez Obrador has been a vocal critic
of the program, saying it was tainted by its association with previous
governments and for financing security equipment in the 2000s.
Mexican
officials say the new agreement will likely focus on the exchange of
information, the root causes of violence, and stemming the flow of
US-made guns to Mexico, a key point of concern for Lopez Obrador.
But negotiating a new agreement will be painful.
The
US wants a more muscular approach to battling drug cartels while Lopez
Obrador prefers softer and less confrontational methods to fighting
gangs, said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a security and foreign policy analyst.
'There
is a minimal area of overlap,' said Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow in
the Foreign Policy program at the Brookings Institution, a Washington
think tank.
'The US is in an awkward
position here because the Lopez Obrador administration is very
comfortable with ending security cooperation.'
What is more, the talks about the new security cooperation may be overshadowed by immigration concerns.
The US is grappling with a migrant
crisis at the border. Migrants, most from Haiti, depart a base camp
towards the jungle in the infamous Darien Gap while on their journey
towards the US on October 7
A surge in the
number of Haitian and Latin American migrants arriving at the US-Mexico
border plunged the Biden administration into another crisis last month
and underlined Washington's reliance on Mexico to help stem the flow.
Nearly
28,000 Haitian migrants were encountered by Border Patrol agents along
the US-Mexico border in Fiscal Year 2021, which ended September 30. In
2020, the number was 4,395.
Last month
around 15,000 mostly Haitian migrants camped near a bridge in Del Rio,
Texas, prompting a humanitarian outcry against the Biden
administration.
Earlier this week the
Washington Examiner reported that border officials are bracing for an
incoming surge of as many as 60,000 Haitian migrants.
Mexico's
importance in managing immigration has given the Lopez Obrador
administration leverage to pursue more independent policies in other
areas, Mexican officials say privately.
During
the US presidential transition early this year, Mexico made it tougher
for American law enforcement agents to operate in the country.
Mexico has also delayed visas for US anti-narcotics officers, the US media has reported.
A
senior Mexican security official said there was optimism about the new
agreement on the Mexican side and there may be scope to review the
restrictions imposed on U.S. agents operating on Mexican soil, but the
conditions cannot return to how they were before Cienfuegos' arrest.
'I think part of the US government knows that that's not possible,' the Mexican official said.
2 comments:
From each according to their abilities......
So nothing was accomplished.
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