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February 14, 2001
On February 14, 2001, a press conference was held at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace to present the conclusions of a panel of U.S. and Mexican experts who worked together to propose a new bilateral framework for Mexican immigration to the U.S. The panel's recommendations were presented to Mexican President Vicente Fox and to the White House before their February 16 meeting.
Panel members in attendance:
United States Co-Chair
Mr. Thomas F. "Mack" McLarty, III
Kissinger McLarty Associates
Mexico Chair
The Honorable Andrés Rozental
Vice Chairman President, Rozental & Associates, Former Deputy Foreign Minister of Mexico
U.S. Convener
Dr. Demetrios Papademetriou
Senior Associate and Co-Director
International Migration Policy Program
Carnegie Endowment for Int'l. Peace
Present: Randy Johnson, Vice President, Labor and Employee Benefits, U.S. Chamber of Commerce; Eliseo Medina, Executive Vice President, Service Employees International Union AFL-CIO, CLC; Norma Samaniego, Directora General, Santa Fe Consultores and Former Deputy Minister of Labor and Social Welfare of Mexico; Frank Sharry, Executive Director, National Immigration Forum.
Andrés
Rozental, Mack McLarty and Demetri Papademetriou |
Demetri Papademetriou, co-director of the International Migration Policy Program of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the U.S. convener of the U.S.-Mexico Migration Panel, began the briefing. He noted that the panel's work has been a truly bilateral effort, reflecting the interests and needs of both Mexico and the U.S. Their report offers a road map, or framework, to understand and manage migration issues between the two countries. He argued the timing is right for a re-casting of the relationship given the increasing confluence of economic and demographic factors in both countries, the desire of Presidents Bush and Fox to strengthen the U.S.-Mexico relationship and the black market in migration that has emerged but which must stop.
Thomas "Mack" McLarty, Vice-Chairman of Kissinger McLarty Associates and former White House Chief of Staff and Special Envoy for the Americas and U.S. co-chair on the panel, spoke next. He commented on the presidents' unique experiences, as former governors and businessmen, with migratory issues. The fact that they are taking office at the same time presents a unique opportunity for change. He said that President Fox's election-the first time in 71 years that a non-PRI member has been elected president in Mexico-signals a profound change in Mexico. While President Bush has experience working with Mexico, he can build on the work of the former Bush and Clinton administrations, such as the creation of NAFTA and the Mexico support package. Mexico is a partner, neighbor, and friend, McLarty said. It is the United State's second largest trading partner and a neighbor sharing a long border, as well as a friend with increasing cultural ties. He noted that our relationship should be one of a true partnership, based on respect and trust-together seeking the best answer to the challenge of poverty. The U.S.-Mexico relationship is increasingly equitable and more so today than ever before. The U.S.-Mexico Migration Panel has sought to address the way people and families pass between the two countries in a safe, legal, and orderly way. Both countries have their own interests: Mexico wants to prosper and allow talent to flourish and stay in Mexico, and the U.S. needs and will continue to need more workers. The panel's report calls for the crafting of a "grand bargain" through which both nations will reap rewards.
McLarty highlighted four core principles in the report. The first is to improve treatment of Mexican migrants by making visas and legal status more widely available. This means "making legality the norm." The second is cracking down on criminal smuggling organizations. The third is helping border communities work together to build a more viable border region. The fourth is implementing development initiatives to diminish migration pressures in Mexico.
He then emphasized that the border should be seen as an opportunity and an intersection between dignity, common sense, and the rule of law. It should be a place where ideals converge, not where interests separate.
Andrés Rozental, president of Rozental & Associates and former Deputy Foreign Minister of Mexico and the Mexico chair of the panel, described the panel's composition as of fifteen Americans and fifteen Mexicans with expertise on the issue of migration who were prepared to think "out of the box." The highlight of the report is that it suggests a "grand bargain" with proposals that, taken together, may change the way Mexico and the U.S. approach the border. It consists of the four principles mentioned by McLarty and also a few specific proposals which the governments can do now. He urged the two countries to begin a serious and mature discussion of immigration as a shared responsibility and find common points of agreement. The specific proposals include the following:
- The U.S. should make legal status for Mexicans who want to come to the U.S. and who are here more widely available. The U.S. should increase opportunities for family reunification, work visas, and regularization of status of undocumented immigrants already in the U.S.
- The U.S. should expand permanent family visas. Many families are separated or are undocumented families living in the U.S.
- The U.S. and Mexico should make a joint commitment to share responsibility for law enforcement. They must protect migrants' human rights and crack down on human traffickers.
- The two governments must address issues already on the table. For example, they should sign a bilateral social security totalization agreement, which would allow Mexican workers to earn credit for their work in the U.S. Additionally they should tackle the problem in "circularity," whereby workers migrate to the U.S. for brief periods of time and then return to Mexico. In the past, it was easier for workers to work temporarily in the U.S., that is not so today. The panel suggests that the U.S. put a moratorium on building walls at the border, least until both governments can engage in a mature negotiation of the migration relationship.