Biden and López Obrador will bring the immigration issue back to the table

On the sidelines of the APEC summit in San Francisco, the presidents of the United States and Mexico, Joe Biden and Andrés Manuel López Obrador, will discuss migration affecting their respective borders.

The Presidents of the United States, Joe Biden, and Mexico, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, They will be holding a meeting this week in San Francisco, where, among other things, they will once again address migration at a regional level.

The White House reported this Monday that “President Biden and President López Obrador will also discuss how we can continue to work as partners to address migration at our shared border and mobilize a hemispheric response to this challenge.”

The leaders will take the opportunity to discuss the meeting as part of APEC Economic Leaders Week in San Francisco, California.

Since arriving at the White House in January 2021, Biden has held direct meetings with López Obrador due to the significant increase in migrants arriving irregularly at the country’s southern border, which is why the Democratic administration has resorted to its plan to establish “orderly and secure relations.” Immigration.”

The U.S. has promoted measures ranging from expedited deportations to setting quotas of up to 30,000 visas per month to humanitarian parole for applicants from Venezuela, Cuba, Haiti and Nicaragua.