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WorldPresident Andrés Manuel gains influence with Washington as Mexico tightens down on...

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President Andrés Manuel gains influence with Washington as Mexico tightens down on migrants

Final month, as the Biden administration mixed to oversee the most recent wave of vagrants overpowering the US southern border, best US movement specialists crossed into Mexico for an crisis assembly.

Situated around a Ciudad Juárez conference room, the authorities and their Mexican partners drafted a 15-point arrange to assist defuse the flashpoint – most of it a checklist of activities for the Mexican government. Outstandingly, concurring to a readout from Mexico’s government movement office, Mexico concurred to carry out more expensive extraditions of the vagrants gathering on their side of the border – a move that a few accepted would discourage tumultuous intersections.

The measures, which moreover indicated Mexican endeavors to clamp down on the pulverize of vagrants riding north on railcars, are the most recent in a arrangement of approach shifts in Mexico that have lightened, in the event that somewhat, the enormous political migraine in Washington caused lastingly by relocation. Examiners in both nations see a down to earth deal: as Mexico progressively carries the weight of US migration procedure, the Biden administration has allowed uncommon breathing space to the country’s divisive but prevalent pioneer.

“Mexico has genuine use within the relationship with the US. And right presently that use is around migration,” said Andrew Selee, the president of the nonpartisan Movement Arrangement Founded.

Sharing about 2,000 miles of arrive border and a history of imperative financial trade, Mexico and the US have long held interlaced migration approaches that adjusted as worldwide movement designs moved. When George W. Bush made his to begin with trip out of the US as president in 2001, it was to the farm of Vicente Fox, the Mexican pioneer, to examine a modern time of participation on border issues, like exchange, drugs, and the northward stream of Mexicans, who at that time comprised the bulk of undocumented border-crossers.

But as spiraling viciousness and frantic financial conditions fueled a long time of mass relocation out of Central America and the Caribbean to the US, overwhelming the country’s legitimate admissions framework, the extend of Mexican region in between got to be a basic “buffer state,” said Maureen Meyer of the Washington Office on Latin America.

“The Mexico southern border lovely much was the US southern border,” Meyer said.

Beneath weight from a few US organizations, Mexico has over and over sent assets to its border with Guatemala over the past 10 a long time to formalize movement courses and confined record numbers of vagrants at recently introduced checkpoints as they made their way north.

At the steerage of Mexico’s most recent migration coordination with the US has been President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, a radical pioneer who in 2018 campaigned on resistance to doing the US’s “dirty work” on relocation. His political calculus has changed quickly since at that point.

Beneath the danger of devastating taxes from then-President Donald Trump, López Obrador concurred in 2019 to permit refuge candidates to hold up out their claims interior Mexico beneath the “Remain inMexico” approach, roiling activists who said it constrained transients into unsafe living conditions.

During the pandemic, the US used a rule called Title 42 to send back many asylum seekers at the border. López Obrador agreed to take in many of these migrants, even though Mexico usually didn’t do this. This put a lot of pressure on Mexico’s border cities. In May, when the US stopped using Title 42, López Obrador still let people come back for humanitarian reasons.

“I believe that these recent actions go too far because they not only prevent people from coming to the United States, which has been the main focus, but also exceed what is necessary,” Meyer explained.

She said that it allows people who have been deported from the United States to either stay in Mexico or go back to their home countries.

We don’t know much about the deportation plan that was announced last month. In a press conference in Washington on Friday, Mexican Foreign Secretary Alicia Bárcena mentioned that Mexican authorities were doing six flights every week to send migrants back to Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. Bárcena said that officials were looking into the idea of sending more returns to Ecuador, Venezuela, and Colombia.

It was not clear where the deportation flights were going and when they started. It was also unclear if the migrants going back had already been sent away from the US or if they were waiting for a decision on their asylum application. Stakeholders in Mexico recently told CNN that there hasn’t been any noticeable change in the speed of repatriation flights in the northern regions of the country.

A person who speaks for Mexico’s immigration agency didn’t give any more information about the deportations.

However, the announcement may have already made migrants less likely to try and cross into the US without the necessary appointment to seek asylum. CNN has reported that there was a 30% decrease in the number of migrants entering the US near El Paso, Texas during the weekend after the meeting.

López Obrador said he intends to have a meeting with officials from Latin American and Caribbean countries that have people who are moving to other places. The meeting will happen soon. Mexico last month agreed to ask countries like Venezuela, Nicaragua, and Cuba, which don’t have good relationships with the US, to take back their citizens who were deported at the border.

“What we want is to find a way to deal with the issue of migration by addressing its root causes,” López Obrador said during a media briefing. “We need to come together. ”

Recently, the two countries have been working together a lot, and this has involved a lot of traveling back and forth between them. Last week, Bárcena had meetings in Washington with important people like Senate leaders and Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall, who advises Biden on matters related to homeland security. Antony Blinken, who is the US Secretary of State, will visit Mexico this week. He will go there with several other important government officials and have a meeting with López Obrador.

Mexican negotiators want the US to promise to provide more ways for migrants to enter the country legally. This includes temporary work visas and a program called humanitarian parole, which has recently been expanded. The Biden administration says this program has allowed many people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to come to the US with the help of a local sponsor and get permission to work.

Last month, before the news about deportations in Mexico, the foreign minister of Mexico said in an interview with Bloomberg that the US and Mexico were almost reaching an agreement with the United Nations. This agreement would involve reviewing and evaluating tens of thousands of migrants in Mexico to determine if they can enter the US through special permission programs. The US has started centers in Colombia, Costa Rica, and Guatemala for the same purpose.

A spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees told CNN that they frequently talk to the authorities in the US and Mexico about how they can help with future plans.

According to Selee, the Mexican government needs to show that they support and protect migrants and provide them with legal ways to move to the United States in order to have the authority to enforce stricter migration policies. This is important because Mexico has a history of its citizens migrating to the United States.

Does Lopez Obrador have the freedom to do what he wants.

However, some analysts believe that there is a more suspicious reason for the cooperation. They argue that the Biden administration has been ignoring certain aspects of López Obrador’s plans, which would normally receive criticism.

“López Obrador realized quickly that if he agreed to support Biden, he would gain political power to limit US pressure on various issues between the two countries or within Mexico,” explained Arturo Sarukhán, a former Mexican ambassador to Washington who has been critical of the current government.

Critics say that López Obrador has been moving away from democracy in several ways. He tried to change the country’s independent election authority, often criticizes the judiciary and the press, and gave too much power to the military in policing and transportation.

The election reform that was approved earlier this year but later stopped by the Mexican Supreme Court reduced the power of the country’s independent election authority. This means that they reduced the number of people working for this authority all over the country and limited their ability to make decisions on their own. This happened right before the upcoming presidential election next year.

Tens of thousands of people from Mexico protested against the government’s policy in the biggest opposition demonstration during President López Obrador’s time in office. Critics said it was not good for the democratic system.

But in Washington, the Biden administration was surprisingly quiet. After the protests in February, Ned Price, an important advisor to Blinken, said that there is a big discussion happening in Mexico about changing the way elections work and making sure that electoral and judicial institutions are independent. This shows that Mexico has a strong and active democracy.

We honor Mexico’s right to govern itself.

If Mexico had less control in its relationship with the US, there would be more pressure from the State Department and White House to address the decline in democracy that is happening in Mexico.

I believe that the United States should support Mexico’s democracy because if they don’t, there might be a situation in Washington where people start wondering who is to blame for Mexico’s problems.

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