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Trump heads to US-Mexico border after a week of confusing threats

President Donald Trump is headed to the US-Mexico border on Friday, following a week of confusing comments over whether he’d shut it down. The President w...
Donald Trump

President Donald Trump is headed to the US-Mexico border on Friday, following a week of confusing comments over whether he’d shut it down.

The President will head to Calexico, California, Friday afternoon to tour replacement border fencing and participate in a border security roundtable. According to the Arizona Republic, the two-mile stretch replacement barrier he’ll see was authorized prior to when he came into office, but a plaque on the bollards calls it “the first section of President Trump’s border wall.”

The visit follows a series of threats Trump made calling for Mexico and Congress to shape up or face the closure of the southern border.

The initial threat Trump issued last week was that he’d close down the southern border within a week if Mexico didn’t increase migrant apprehensions on its southern border, where Central American migrants seeking to move northward may eventually try to illegally enter the US.

The threat then evolved earlier this week when Trump began to push the responsibility from Mexico to Congress, after the White House began to claim that Mexico was doing more to stop border crossings and shifting its one-week ultimatum to an indefinite deadline.

But by Thursday, Trump’s demand morphed into a tariff threat. He said he’d give Mexico a one-year warning and potentially implement a 25% auto tariff if the country didn’t stop the flow of illicit drugs being smuggled into the US.

The tariffs, he suggested, would make a border closure unnecessary.

“I don’t think we’ll ever have to close the border because the penalty of tariffs on cars coming into the United States from Mexico, at 25%, will be massive.”

Despite the clear pivot, Trump said Friday ahead of his California departure that he “never changed his mind” about his threat to close the southern border.

“I never changed my mind at all. I may shut it down at some point, but I’d rather do tariffs,” Trump told reporters.

“The tariffs will work just like they’ve worked with steel,” he said. The auto tariff, he added, “supersedes” the new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade.

The President also said he’s “looking at an economic penalty on all the drugs that are coming in through the southern border and killing our people.”

However, further details on the potential economic penalties or the auto tariffs have yet to be announced by the Trump administration.

The threat to close down the southern border was sparked by a recent increase in family units attempting to enter the US illegally, which the Department of Homeland Security and Customs and Border Protections say has left their systems at a “breaking point.”

Last week, in the wake of Trump’s initial threat, the Department of Homeland Security said it plans to commit to pulling some officers from legal ports of entry to help with the influx of migrants crossing illegally. This plan would not fully close ports on the southern border as of now. However, it would slow processing for individuals trying to go across the border.

 

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