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Post by Admin on Jan 9, 2023 17:41:15 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jan 11, 2023 17:47:16 GMT
Joe Biden, Justin Trudeau and Andrés Manuel López Obrador said they had strengthened a regional partnership after a summit in Mexico City. They discussed economic co-operation, climate change, and the movement of people and drugs across the southern US border. President Biden recently announced a plan to accept up to 30,000 migrants each month, while also expanding a policy to make it easier to send many back to Mexico. MEXICO CITY (AP) — President Joe Biden, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sought to downplay their frustrations with one another on migration and trade as they met for the near-annual North American Leaders Summit. The leaders offered a unified front on Tuesday despite tensions that have put a strain on their relationships even as Biden has made repairing alliances a cornerstone of his foreign policy agenda. The tensions were front and center when Biden and López Obrador met on Monday, with the Mexican president complaining of “abandonment” and “disdain” for Latin America. But as they closed Tuesday’s summit in Mexico City with a joint news conference, the leaders offered an optimistic outlook. “We’re true partners the three of us,” said Biden, adding that they had “genuine like” for one another. “We share a common vision for the future, grounded on common values.” López Obrador, for his part, thanked Biden for not building “even one meter of wall,” a not so subtle dig at Biden’s Republican predecessor, Donald Trump. The warmth during their joint press conference stood in stark contrast to the more brusque exchange a day earlier. Still, López Obrador prodded Biden to “insist” Congress regularize undocumented Mexican migrants who work in industries where American employers are struggling mightily to find enough workers. JOE BIDEN
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Post by Admin on Jan 11, 2023 20:40:30 GMT
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