April 2, 2024

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Developments

For the second consecutive month, Ali Bradley of the right-leaning NewsNation outlet published leaked CBP migration data from March to her social media accounts. (Bradley’s early-March leak of February data turned out to be very close to the final count released weeks later.)

Bradley reported 137,557 Border Patrol apprehensions of migrants at the border in March, which would be a 2 percent decrease from February—only the second time, in the 25 years for which we have data, in which migration declined from February to March.

The leaked data point to migration increasing since February from three countries (Mexico +5%, Venezuela +88%, Ecuador +35%) and decreasing from two (Guatemala -35%, Cuba -4%).

This would be an important increase in migration from Venezuela: during January and February, U.S. encounters with Venezuelan migrants lagged far behind Mexico’s, indicating that a large number of Venezuelan migrants have been stuck in Mexico.

The leaked data indicate increased migration in two Border Patrol sectors (San Diego, California +7% and El Paso, Texas +27%) and reduced migration in another two (Tucson, Arizona—the busiest sector— -15%, Del Rio, Texas -20%).

Mexican authorities yesterday surged police, immigration agents, and national guard personnel to their side of the border between Ciudad Juárez and El Paso, Border Report reported.

Analyses and Feature Stories

At the American Prospect, Dara Lind of the American Immigration Council calls for investing in the U.S. asylum and refugee systems, expanding support for humanitarian migrants, and not abandoning the post-World War II commitment to the Refugee Convention at a time of record-high global migration. “America still loves a refugee,” Lind concludes. “It’s just not clear whether the American government is up to the task.”

Two attorneys from the WilmerHale firm, writing for Bloomberg Law, find zero basis for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s (R) claim that migration to his state meets the constitutional definition of an “invasion.”

An essay from the Niskanen Center’s Gil Guerra draws attention to increasing migration from Colombia, Ecuador, China, and India.

The Council on Foreign Relations’ Will Freeman warned that worsening political turmoil and corruption in Peru portend further increases in migration of that country’s citizens to the U.S.-Mexico border, which is already at a historic high.

Despite some recent reporting and rhetoric giving the opposite impression, an InsightCrime analysis finds that Venezuela’s fast-growing “Tren de Aragua” organized crime group “appears to have no substantial U.S. presence and looks unlikely to establish one.”

An article in the medical journal Cureus found “lower extremity” and “lumbar spinal” injuries to be common in a sample of 108 people who had fallen from the border wall between 2016 and 2021.

“A lot of people living in the world’s borderlands experience what scholars refer to as a human rights encounter,” wrote Arizona-based journalist John Washington at High Country News. “In such an encounter, you meet someone who has crossed the border despite being legally barred from doing so, in which moment you’re presented with a choice: You can help the person with water, shelter or a ride—but if you do so, you risk being arrested, prosecuted, and even imprisoned.”

An Associated Press analysis asserts that Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant message, which failed to appeal to swing voters in 2018, 2020, and 2022, could land harder this year because migrants with economic needs have been arriving in more areas in the U.S. interior.

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