Mayor Cruz Perez Cuellar of Ciudad Juarez expressed readiness to handle a potential influx of migrants as U.S. policies under President Donald Trump
Trump’s threats of tariffs and mass deportations fuel rising anxiety on the border and in Mexico. Border businesses that depend on trade are bracing for the economic consequences. Mexican officials publicly downplay the impact but prepare for whatever comes next.
Migrants who waited months to cross the U.S. border with Mexico learned their CBP One appointments had been canceled moments after Donald Trump was sworn in as president.
The Trump administration has ended use of the border app called CBP One that allowed nearly 1 million people to legally enter the United States.
Puente News Collaborative is a bilingual nonprofit newsroom, convener and funder dedicated to high-quality, fact-based news and information from the U.S.-Mexico border. Words by Alfredo Corchado, Eduardo García,
Sheinbaum has so far staved off Trump’s tariff threats by ramping up migrant detentions within Mexico and cracking down on fentanyl production and trafficking. In turn, Trump, 78, recently praised Sheinbaum and Mexico in his teleconferenced speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Mexico’s government has been creating shelters fit for 2,500 people each to take back deportees from the US. Several organisations said the system was unusually efficient so far, but that there was no clear additional plan for the estimated 380,000 Mexicans displaced internally by violence or the hundreds of thousands of foreigners now stuck.
The CBP One app, which allowed asylum seekers and migrants to schedule appointments with border officials, has been shut down by President Donald Trump. The move fulfills one of his "Day 1 ...
EL PASO, Texas (KFOX14/CBS4) — Mayor Cruz Perez Cuellar of Ciudad Juarez expressed readiness to ... including the CBP One app, leaving many stranded on the Mexican side of the border.
Pre-approved travelers use dedicated lanes, known as express lanes, to avoid long inspection lines at the bridges, the U.S. Custom and Border Patrol website states.
The border shooting occurred about 10 p.m. when Border Patrol agents from the Clint station came under fire south of San Elizario, about 7.5 miles east of the Ysleta Port of Entry, CBP said in a statement. The Mexican military responded to the location.