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Obama in Guadalajara
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During his whirlwind trip to Guadalajara to meet with, Mexico President
Felipe Calderon and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, President Obama
disclosed that his planned action on U.S. immigration reform has now been
put off until 2010.
The president had made a similar disclosure last Friday prior to his trip to
a roundtable press meeting with Hispanic Link News Service and other
reporters covering the Latino beat.
At that time, Obama outlined an immigration reform framework and said
preparatory administrative measures were already underway. He cited the
FBI's clearing of a background-check backlog, greater use of advanced
technologies for processing, and the termination of indiscriminate raids.
In the fall, a bipartisan taskforce of invested parties would begin crafting
legislation for introduction in the beginning of the coming year. Republican
buy-in is essential to achieve comprehensive reform, he told us.
Obama also pledged to work on Mexico and Canada border issues related to
emissions control that contribute to global warming, and to address the drug
cartel menace. The United States and Canada have already begun training
9,000 college-educated Mexican federal police officers for that effort.
Earlier, the influential Mexico City news Web site EjeCentral.com summed up
the summit as having more discord than producing agreements and that little
happened of major substance.
Before the meeting, Calderon was reported to have wanted Harper to back off
from the unilateral imposition of a visa requirement on Mexican citizens
visiting Canada. Not for now, Harper is reported to have told Calderon.
The visa requirement will remain for the present while Canada formulates a
policy addressing people who seek asylum. In turn, Mexico has triggered a
retaliatory requirement that Canadians who work in Mexico must now also
acquire visas.
EjeCentral.com reported that 69 percent of the Canadian public approves of
the measure. Of 225 asylum applications received weekly before the visa
requirement, a drop of 17 percent was reported for the week after the
measure was applied.
Calderon sought for Obama to cancel the prohibition of Mexican cargo vessels
on U.S. highways, a measure running counter to the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA).
U.S. commercial interests, except for the trucking industry, generally favor
lifting the embargo because of retaliatory tariffs imposed by Mexico on a
large number of products that affect 40 states. Obama has previously
disclosed that work is progressing on a measure to go to Congress soon.
Harper meanwhile has expressed displeasure with the United States' ``Buy
American" provisions in the stimulus law that Obama signed in February. The
package has been interpreted by local and state governments as excluding
Canada and Mexico from bidding.
While Obama endorses Calderon's use of the military to combat
drug-trafficking cartels, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the powerful chairman
of an appropriations subcommittee on foreign operations, in an Aug. 6
statement, said it was ``premature" to declare Mexico to have met the
requirements for the conditional U.S. funding assistance for its
military-led drug war.
Of the $1.4 billion approved in 2007 for the three-year assistance program
to disrupt and curb criminal drug organizations, the law requires the
administration to withhold 15 percent of the appropriation each year until
the U.S. secretary of state submits a report to Congress affirming that
Mexico's military and police who violate human rights, are prosecuted in
accordance with Mexican and international law.
An unnamed White House spokesman said Obama brought up the matter with
Calderon during their direct talks.
Preparations and emergency measures concerning the H1N1 (formerly referred
to as swine flu) virus was a topic where there was general agreement about
public health measures to take.
``The North American Leaders' Summit," as the meeting was billed, is the
annual gathering of the North American leaders to do collaborative work on
issues of mutual concern, such as border security, immigration reform and
economic recovery.
At the press meeting with Hispanic Link and nine other reporters prior to
his Guadalajara trip, Obama delineated a difference between NAFTA, the trade
agreement, and this summit on interests between the North American heads of
state.
Obama has previously met twice with Calderon and Harper. The Canadian prime
minister is scheduled to arrive in Washington for further talks in
September.
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