From ACT For America <[email protected]>
Subject Largest Migrant Caravan in Recent Years!
Date June 16, 2022 11:22 AM
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Stop the Border Invasion!
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Dear John,
 
MIGRANT CARAVAN CONTAINING THOUSANDS TRAVELS THROUGH MEXICO TOWARD US
BORDERS. 
By Adam Shaw, Griff Jenkins | Fox News 
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“MIGRATION ACTIVISTS SAID THE GROUP COULD BE ONE OF THE REGION'S
LARGEST MIGRANT CARAVANS IN RECENT YEARS.” -REUTERS
 
According to Fox News reported on June 11th, “the massive migrant
caravan, which at one point swelled up to well over 10,000 migrants as
it set off toward the U.S. border from southern Mexico, has now broken
up as Mexican officials have offered temporary visas to migrants –
although organizers say they will still travel to the U.S.
-------------------------
 ILLEGAL MIGRANT COST TO TAXPAYERS
 $83,000 PER MIGRANT
10,000-18,000 DAILY PREDICTION BY BORDER PATROL
 TOTAL DAILY COST BETWEEN 830 MILLION TO $1.5 BILLION
-------------------------
Organizer Luis Villagran told Fox News that about 80% of migrants in
the caravan, approximately 9,000, have received a migratory multiple
form (FMM). That travel visa allows them to travel freely in Mexico
temporarily.”
 
Villagran told Fox News that, although the caravan is breaking up, all
the migrants in the block are heading to the United States to attempt
to make their way into the country.
 
The caravan set off from Tapachula, Mexico earlier this week and met
little resistance from Mexican authorities. Organizers also said that
the caravan had hit a police check where there were the Mexican
National Guard, immigration officials and state police – but
officials let the caravan through "freely."
 
The migrants organized the caravan specifically a week ago because
Mexican officials were not providing the temporary documents in
Tapachula. 
 
Now, after a week and walking less than 25 miles, they have
effectively received what they wanted, with Mexico granting them the
legal status to head to the US border without being in Mexico
illegally. Under Mexican laws, migrants cannot travel past the Mexican
southern state of Chiapas without documentation. This was a response
to the 2018-2019 caravans.
 
Villigran said that as of yesterday evening, less than 3,000 migrants
got on buses that the Mexican immigration office provided to take them
to the customs office. Now, more than 9,000 have been issued.
 
It’s one of a number of massive caravans in recent years that has
made its way toward the U.S. border, including one in October last
year – which are typically broken up by Mexican authorities before
they reach the border. However, as with this caravan, just because the
caravans are broken up does not mean that the migrants involved stop
moving north.
 
The U.S. has been seeing massive migrant numbers, with caravan-size
migrant numbers being encountered every few days by agents along the
border. There were more than 234,000 encounters in April alone, and
that number is expected to rise over the summer.
 
Meanwhile, the Biden administration has been blocked from ending Title
42 public health expulsions -- through which a majority of migrants
have been expelled since March 2020. That move to end the order was
seen as a motivating factor for more migrants to try their luck at
getting into the U.S.
 
The Biden administration has faced heavily criticism for its handling
of the crisis, with Republicans tying the surge to the
administration’s rollback of Trump-era policy and a lax interior
enforcement – combined with calls for mass amnesty in Washington
D.C.
 
The Biden administration has blamed "root causes" like poverty,
violence and climate change for the increase in numbers and has rolled
out a number of initiatives to tackle those root causes – led by
Vice President Kamala Harris.
President Biden on Friday, along with a number of Western Hemisphere
leaders, unveiled a "Los Angeles Declaration" at the Summit of the
Americas – which stated shared principles related to migration. The
U.S. committed to a number of concrete measures, including an
expansion of work visas, refugee resettlement and millions in funding
for refugees and migrants across the hemisphere.
 
However, the leaders of Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador
were not in attendance. 
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