Mayorkas defends administration's handling of child migrants
Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas also discussed the administration's policy on unaccompanied minors in the immigration system on Monday the White House press briefing, a topic for which the Biden administration has come under much fire.
Mayorkas stressed that minors were only temporarily in the system before being placed with sponsors or going into the care of the Department of Health and Human Services. He stressed that the Biden administration would handle child migrants differently from the Trump administration when pressed by reporters.
"Well, actually, the Trump administration expelled children to Mexico, and we are not expelling young children. We are not apprehending a nine-year-old child who's come alone, who has traversed Mexico, whose loving parents had sent that child alone. We're not expelling that nine-year-old child to Mexico when that child's country of origin was Guatemala, Honduras or El Salvador," Mayorkas said. "We are actually bringing that child into a Border Patrol station, as a stepping point to get that child in the hands of HHS that has the capacity and and the unique talents to care for the child."
"We are taking a look at where efficiencies can be achieved in the best interest of the child," Psaki said. "It is the best interest of the child that really define our actions."
He also discussed the work of the Child Reunification Task Force, an effort spearheaded by first lady Jill Biden, to try to get children reunited with families. Mayorkas boasted that 105 families have been reunited through the effort.