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Biden Harris Tire Of Images Of Illegals Walking Across Border Are Now Busing Them with Meals and Security

In a controversial move to manage border crossings, the Biden administration is now partnering with Mexico to provide free bus transportation, meals, and security for migrants entering the U.S. under a new program—raising questions about border control and immigration policy.


In a move to address the surge of illegal border crossings, the Biden administration has partnered with Mexico to streamline migrant entry into the United States. The new "Secure Emerging Mobility Corridor" program, launched by Mexico’s National Institute of Migration (INM), offers free bus transportation, meals, and security for migrants from the Mexico-Guatemala border to U.S. ports of entry. This initiative, designed to manage the timing of migrant flow, aligns with the Biden-Harris administration’s use of the CBP One app, which schedules migrant admissions into the U.S.


The first bus, carrying migrants from Central and South America, arrived in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, just across the border from McAllen, Texas, early Wednesday. Mexico's government, in collaboration with the Biden administration, organized the travel as part of efforts to regulate migrant journeys through Mexico and into the U.S. This move follows a series of binational immigration meetings held in August between President Biden, Vice President Harris, and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.


Under the program, buses depart from two southern Mexican cities—Villahermosa, Tabasco, and Tapachula, Chiapas—and arrive at designated U.S. ports of entry. Migrants admitted through the CBP One app are released into the U.S. to pursue asylum claims without undergoing a credible fear interview, a key step in most asylum processes. This app-based immigration system, which has not been authorized by Congress, allows for the entry of more than 500,000 migrants annually.


The initiative has stirred debate over its impact on U.S. immigration policy. With over 800,000 migrants entering the U.S. yearly under this and similar programs, it raises concerns about the strain on border resources and the lack of Congressional approval for such a large-scale program. For the Biden administration, however, the effort aims to address growing criticism of its handling of the border crisis by providing a more controlled and secure process.

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