While President Obama focuses on domestic spending, the vice president is turning his attention to our southern neighbors.
In a New York Times op-ed published late Thursday, Vice President Joe Biden explains why Obama intends to ask Congress to spend in 2015 “almost three times what we generally have provided to Central America.”
“As we were reminded last summer when thousands of unaccompanied children showed up on our southwestern border,” Biden begins, “the security and prosperity of Central America are inextricably linked with our own.”
Specifically, Biden says that the “economies of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras remain bogged down as the rest of the Americas surge forward. Inadequate education, institutional corruption, rampant crime and a lack of investment are holding these countries back.”
“Toward that end,” Biden explains, “on Monday, President Obama will request from Congress $1 billion to help Central America’s leaders make the difficult reforms and investments required to address the region’s interlocking security, governance and economic challenges.”
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The request comes just months after an influx of unaccompanied minors overwhelmed federal resources at the U.S. border, opening the Obama administration up to conservative rallying cries for tighter border security and accusations that the president is at fault for attracting migrant kids with false hopes of being granted “amnesty.” Then, in December, the president laid out a series of planned executive actions to address the crisis at the border, giving way to even more right-wing backlash.









