AP:
February 25, 2016
Vice
President Joe Biden said Thursday that some U.S. campaign rhetoric
about Mexico and immigrants has been "dangerous, damaging and incredibly
ill-advised" and is out
of step with most Americans' attitudes.
Speaking
in Mexico City at Cabinet-level talks on boosting economic and
commercial ties with one of the United States' top trading partners,
Biden reassured Mexican officials
that such talk does not reflect the countries' bilateral relations.
"The
main message I wanted to say to you is that I understand that you can't
poison the well and at the same time work out a real estate agreement
to buy the well," he
said.
Without
naming names Biden was generally critical of Republican candidates,
several of whom have proposed measures from walling the entire
U.S.-Mexico border to deporting
all 11 million people estimated to be living in the United States
illegally. GOP front-runner Donald Trump said last year that Mexico was
sending crime, drugs and "rapists" north of the border.
"Some
of the rhetoric coming from some of the presidential candidates on the
other team are I think dangerous, damaging and incredibly ill-advised,"
Biden said. "But here's
what I'm here to tell you: They do not, they do not, they do not
represent the view of the vast majority of the American people."
After meeting with Biden later in the day, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto referred to the immigration talk.
"There
are those who have the vision to eventually close themselves off,
including, I daresay Mr. Vice President, to build walls," Pena Nieto
said. "But that is only isolating.
This is to be alone. It may look in one way like you're closing passage
to a place, but seen another way it is isolation."
Biden
addressed the issue again, saying, "I feel almost obliged to apologize
for some of what my political colleagues have said about Mexico, about
the Mexican people."
Biden
was accompanied at the one-day meeting by U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny
Pritzker, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz and Interior Secretary Sally
Jewell.
Jewell
and her Mexican counterparts signed agreements to cooperate on energy
issues, conservation and preparing for the impacts of climate change,
the U.S. Interior Department
said in a statement. The secretary also commended recent Mexican
reforms opening its energy sector to private investment.
"As
allies and partners, the economies of the U.S. and Mexico are
inextricably linked and a strong energy sector is a key part of that
equation," Jewell said.
Trade between the United States and Mexico totaled about $530 billion last year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
In an interview, Pritzker also said some of the talk emerging from the U.S. presidential campaign is not productive.
Asked
about negotiating improved trade amid Trump's calls for a wall between
the two countries, Pritzker said: "Any kind of rhetoric like that that
is un-American is concerning.
What is important is what we're doing is we're building bridges, we're
not building walls."
Among
goals set for 2016, Pritzker said the two countries plan to establish
an energy business council to improve coordination on trade and use a
mapping system for supply
chains on both sides of the border to help determine where future
border infrastructure projects are most needed.
The
High-Level Economic Dialogue forum between the United States and Mexico
was established by President Barack Obama in 2013. This is the third
year officials have met
to discuss economic growth, job creation and competiveness.
Also
at Thursday's talks was U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western
Hemisphere Affairs Roberta Jacobson, who last June was nominated to
become Washington's next
ambassador to Mexico.
Her
nomination was approved by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in
November. But it has been blocked in the full Senate by Sen. Marco
Rubio, another Republican presidential
candidate, who objects to her role in implementing the Obama
administration's policy of normalizing ties with Cuba.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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