President Indicates That If Mexico Steps Up, He Could Change Position on Border Closure

President Indicates That If Mexico Steps Up, He Could Change Position on Border Closure
Vehicles from Mexico and the United States approach a border crossing in El Paso, Texas, on April 1, 2019. Cedar Attanasio/AP Photo
The Associated Press
Updated:

WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump eased up on April 2 on his threats to shut the southern border this week as officials across his administration explored half-measures that might satisfy the president’s urge for action, like stopping only foot traffic at certain crossings.

Facing a surge of Central American migrants trying to enter the United States, Trump last week threatened to seal the border this week if Mexico did not immediately halt all illegal immigration into the United States, a move that would have enormous economic consequences on both sides of the border.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and President Donald Trump shake hands in the Oval Office at the White House on April 2, 2019. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and President Donald Trump shake hands in the Oval Office at the White House on April 2, 2019. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

While Trump on Tuesday did not back off the idea completely, he said he was pleased with steps Mexico had taken in recent days and renewed his calls for Congress to make changes he contends would solve the problem.

“Let’s see if they keep it done,” he said of Mexico. “Now, if they don’t, or if we don’t make a deal with Congress, the border’s going to be closed, 100 percent.” He also said that he might only close “large sections of the border” and “not all of it.” He added that his posturing was “the only way we’re getting a response.”

Later Tuesday, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen held an emergency call with Cabinet members and White House aides, saying, “We are going to treat it as if we have been hit by a Category 5 hurricane,” according to a person on the call. The person was not authorized to discuss the call publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Nielsen was creating an emergency operations center and named U.S. Border Patrol official Manny Padilla as an operational crisis coordinator to manage the response from within the different immigration agencies at the Department of Homeland Security. Padilla is a 30-year Border Patrol veteran and was recently the head of the Rio Grande Valley Sector in Texas.

His job will be different from that of the immigration or “border czar” that Trump is considering, the official said.

Closing the border completely would disrupt manufacturing supply lines and the flow of goods ranging from avocados to cars, making for a “potentially catastrophic economic impact,” in the words of Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader.

Administration officials grappled with how they might minimize the impact of a shutdown or implement less sweeping actions.

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow, for example, told CNBC he’s been looking at potentially keeping truck lanes open.

“We are looking at different options, particularly if you can keep those freight lanes, the truck lanes, open,” he said. As for the hundreds of thousands of tourists and workers who cross the border legally, Kudlow said, “that may be difficult.”

Earlier, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders had told reporters that, while, “Eventually, it may be that it’s the best decision that we close the border,” the president was “not working on a specific timeline” and all options remained on the table. The Council of Economic Advisers, she said, was conducting a number of studies on the impact, and “working with the president to give him those options.”

White House spokesman Hogan Gidley said in an appearance on MSNBC that closing only certain entry ports, or parts of all of them, could be among the steps short of closing the entire border.

Arrests along the southern border have skyrocketed in recent months and border agents were on track to make 100,000 arrests or denials of entry in March, a 12-year high.

With southern border facilities near a breaking point, U.S. officials are busing many migrants hundreds of miles inland and dropping them off at bus stations and churches.

Responding to Trump’s threats, Nielsen rushed home late Monday night from Europe, where she was attending G7 security meetings and intended to fly to the border mid-week to assess the impact of changes already made, including reassigning some 2,000 border officers assigned to check vehicles to deal with migrant crowds and new efforts to return more asylum seekers to Mexico as they wait out their case.

Officials were hoping to have as many as 300 asylum seekers returned to Mexico per day by the end of the week near Calexico and El Paso in Texas and San Ysidro in California. Right now, only 60 a day are returned.

Nielsen has also requested volunteers from non-immigration agencies within her department and sent a letter to Congress seeking more money and detention space and broader authority to deport families faster. The request was met with disdain by Democrats.

Even absent the extraordinary step of sealing a national border, delays at border stations have been mounting due to the personnel reassignments, Homeland Security officials said. When the Otay Mesa, California, entry port closed for the night Monday, 150 trucks were still waiting to get into the United States.

Trucks wait in a long line for border customs control to cross into the United States at the World Trade Bridge in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, on April 2, 2019. (Daniel Becerril/Reuters)
Trucks wait in a long line for border customs control to cross into the United States at the World Trade Bridge in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, on April 2, 2019. Daniel Becerril/Reuters

Shutting certain border stations or parts of them would not be unprecedented. Over the Thanksgiving holiday last year, Trump said he’d already “closed the border” after officials briefly closed the northbound lanes at San Ysidro, California, for several hours in the early morning to bolster security because of concerns about a potential influx of migrant caravan members.

Mexican officials announced Monday they’d pulled 338 Central American migrants—181 adults and 157 children—off five passenger buses in a southern state that borders Guatemala, and said they had detained 15 possible smugglers on immigration law violations.

By Jill Colvin and Colleen Long