In latest shot at Mexico, Trump proposes U.S. penalty for drugs

In latest shot at Mexico, Trump proposes U.S. penalty for drugs
U.S. President Donald Trump talks to reporters as he departs for travel to the U.S.-Mexico border from the White House in Washington, U.S., April 5, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Barria Copyright CARLOS BARRIA(Reuters)
Copyright CARLOS BARRIA(Reuters)
By Reuters
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By Roberta Rampton

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump, hammering on a favourite theme, on Friday proposed another way to crack down on what he describes as a crisis of undocumented immigration and drug trafficking on the U.S.-Mexico border.

Without providing details, Trump said he was considering an unspecified economic penalty on Mexico to counter drug smuggling, apart from tariffs on imports.

Praising Mexico for moving recently against drug traffickers, Trump said, "If they continue that, everything will be fine. If they don't we're going to tariff their cars at 25 percent."

"Also, I'm looking at an economic penalty for all of the drugs that are coming in through the southern border and killing our people," Trump told reporters in Washington before departing for southern California where he will visit the border.

In a Friday morning Twitter post, Trump said: "Likewise I am looking at an economic penalty for the 500 Billion Dollars in illegal DRUGS that are shipped and smuggled through Mexico and across our Southern Border."

It was not immediately clear what other penalties he was considering. The White House did not respond to a request for elaboration.

Trump said the drug-related tariff would supplant provisions of the recently negotiated U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, known as SUMAC, which has not been approved by Congress.

"If for any reason Mexico stops apprehending and bringing the illegal back to where they came from, the U.S. will be forced to Tariff at 25% all cars made in Mexico and shipped over the Border to us. If that doesn’t work, which it will, I will close the Border," Trump said on Twitter on Friday. "This will super cede SUMAC."

Although Trump has several times linked the issues of illegal immigration and drug smuggling as he tries to tighten border security, much of the drug trade is not carried out by migrants but by professional crime gangs that send narcotics to the United States in vehicles through official ports of entry.

CHANGE IN MEXICO

The Republican president's latest pronouncements, issued informally in rapid succession, came amid a rising flow of migrants, many of them families with children, northward from Central America through Mexico and to the southern U.S. border.

Mexico's initial approach to immigrant caravans from Central America was to freely hand out humanitarian visas with the goal of allowing people to stay and work legally in Mexico. But the government backed away from that policy after a surge in those requesting the documents and amid criticism from Washington.

Mexico’s foreign minister told Reuters last week that more could be done to register immigrants. Since then Mexico has taken a more rigorous approach to interviewing and registering immigrants from Central America, Haiti and Cuba.

Mexico’s National Immigration Institute said this week that humanitarian visas would be given out, but with a focus on the most vulnerable groups. On Thursday, a Mexican federal police plane flew dozens of Haitians home.

On Friday, the Migration Institute said on Twitter that 57 Cubans were sent back to Cuba by plane in the morning. More than 60 Cubans were flown home last week.

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WALL STALL

For years, Trump's go-to solution to illegal immigration was to build a wall on the border, which he originally said Mexico would pay for. After Mexico refused, he asked U.S. taxpayers to pay for it, but Congress refused to provide the money.

He has since tried to circumvent Congress and seize the money for his wall from other accounts by declaring a national emergency, but that strategy is mired in the courts.

Twenty states have filed a motion to block Trump's attempt to divert federal funds through an emergency declaration, the New York state attorney general said on Friday.

"This wall is unnecessary, and an abuse of power that will take away resources that could be used to help Americans across our nation," New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat, said in a Twitter post.

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Democrats have generally opposed Trump's wall proposal, while pushing other types of enhanced border security that they argue would be more effective and less costly than a wall.

Trump will visit Calexico, California, for a tour of the border on Friday.

(Reporting by Doina Chiacu, Steve Holland and Richard Cowan; Additional reporting by Frank Jack Daniel and Lizbeth Diaz in Mexico City; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Alistair Bell)

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