President Donald Trump blamed Democrats on Saturday for the recent
deaths of two children in U.S. Border Patrol custody as his Homeland
Security Secretary called on Congress and the courts to solve the
immigration crisis.
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“Any deaths of children or others at the Border are strictly the fault
of the Democrats and their pathetic immigration policies that allow
people to make the long trek thinking they can enter our country
illegally,” Trump tweeted. "They can't. If we had a Wall, they wouldn't
even try!"
While previous statements out of the White House have extended
condolences to the families of Jakelin Caal Maquin, 7, and Felipe Gomez
Alonzo, 8, the president in his tweets did not use either of the
children's names and only lamented that the Border Patrol isn't getting
credit for "working so hard" to contain the migrant crisis.
Trump’s tweets came during Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen
Nielsen’s weekend trip to the border following the deaths of two
children in U.S. custody.
President Donald Trump listens during a signing ceremony for
criminal justice reform legislation in the Oval Office of the White
House in Washington D.C., Dec. 21, 2018.
Border officials say they are experiencing an unprecedented spike in the
number of families traveling with young children to claim asylum.
Jakelin and Felipe, who died within weeks of each other, were the first
children in more than 10 years to die while in U.S. border custody.
In a follow-up tweet, the president also said the children "very sick before they were given over to Border Patrol."
"The father of the young girl said it was not their fault, he hadn’t given her water in days," he tweeted.
Contrary to Trump's allegation that the children were already ill when
they were detained, Jakelin's father said the girl had eaten and was
hydrated during the trek to the border. It took 90 minutes for her to
get medical attention after agents first learned she was sick, according
to a DHS account of the incident.
This Dec, 12, 2018, photo provided by Catarina Gomez, shows her
half-brother Felipe Gomez Alonzo, 8, near her home in Yalambojoch,
Guatemala.
The boy's mother told the Associated Press that "he wasn't sick” when
the young boy left home, and he was under the care of agents for several
days before he died. His official cause of death remains unknown, and
an investigation is ongoing.
The deaths of the children raised questions about whether the
administration adequately prepared for an expected influx of migrants.
PHOTO:A boy carries a picture of Guatemalan seven-year-old Jakelin
Caal in a remote stretch of the New Mexico desert in Guatemala City,
Dec. 25, 2018.
The government has been partially shut down over funding for Trump's
proposed wall for more than a week now. The president has repeatedly
threatened to close the border entirely if Democrats don’t agree to his
financing demands.
Workers in El Paso, Texas, replace a section of the Mexico-U.S.
border fence next to the international border bridge "Paso del Norte" as
seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Sept. 26, 2018.
But Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Nancy Pelosi, who is expected to become
speaker of the House again next week, have been warring with Trump ever
since an Oval Office visit erupted over funding for the wall.
Schumer has said the president owns the shutdown, derisively calling it the "Trump Shutdown."
"The President wanted the shutdown, but he seems not to know how to get
himself out of it," Schumer tweeted on Monday. "As long as the President
is guided by the House Freedom Caucus, it’s hard to see how he can come
up with a solution that can pass both the House and Senate and end his
#TrumpShutdown."
Pelosi, meanwhile, said the death of the children is "unconscionable."
“We all have a moral responsibility to ensure all children of God are
treated with compassion and decency," Pelosi said in a statement.
Democrats have pledged to open a formal inquiry into the conditions in
migrant detention centers when they formally regain control of the House
on Jan. 3.
Nielsen, however, on Saturday called on Congress to “put politics aside”
and fix what she called a “growing security and humanitarian crisis” at
the border.
Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen waits to testify to
the House Judiciary Committee hearing on oversight of the Department of
Homeland Security on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., Dec. 20, 2018.
The secretary further highlighted her belief that U.S. courts shoulder
partial blame for the crisis at the border, suggesting past rulings have
been incorrectly decided.
“We know that if Congress were to act, or the courts were to enforce the
law as written, we could address this crisis tomorrow - instead we
continue to do more with less,” she said in a statement.
Nielsen traveled to El Paso, Texas, on Friday to meet with the city’s
mayor and planned to meet with border authorities in Yuma, Arizona, on
Saturday.
“As I have said before, I ask Congress to please put politics aside and
recognize this for the growing security and humanitarian crisis it is.
DHS continues to stand ready to work with Congress on commonsense
legislative fixes to secure our borders, protect communities, protect
vulnerable populations, and ensure both a safe and orderly migrant flow
as well as facilitate legitimate trade and travel,” she added.
Nielsen’s insistence that Congress and the courts are to blame is only
part of the equation. The Trump administration knew weeks in advance
that large groups of migrant families were headed to the U.S. border.
But it was a 1997 court settlement, known as the Flores agreement, that
determined the federal government couldn’t hold children longer than 20
days.
In the most recent death, the boy’s step-sister told The Associated
Press that she had heard that it might be easier to gain access to the
United States if a child was with an adult.
Congress also is in a position to respond to the crisis by approving
resources for U.S. border and immigration programs. Democrats have said
they support additional money for overall border security, but do not
support directing money toward building a massive security wall as Trump
has suggested.
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