Administration of Joseph R. Biden, Jr., 2021

March 24, 2021

The President. Well folks, today I have two announcements to make. One is, we've got ourselves a Secretary. Xavier, welcome.

Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra. Thank you, Mr. President.

The President. Thanks for being willing to do this, and I really appreciate it. And also today, I'veâI said when we became a team and got elected that the Vice President was going to be the last person in the room. She didn't realize that means she gets every assignment. [Laughter]

But the Vice President and I, and all of us here, have been working very hard to pass the legislation that is going to beat this virus, as well as get people back to work and change their prospects. And so she's traveling all over the country working that.

In addition to that, there's about five other major things she's handling, but I've asked her, the VP, todayâbecause she's the most qualified person to do itâto lead our efforts with Mexico and the Northern Triangle and the countries that helpâare going to need help in stemming the movement of so many folks, stemming the migration to our southern border.

And you know, back when I was Vice President, I got a similar assignment, but one of the things we did was, we made sure that we got a bipartisan agreement with Democrats and Republicans to provide over $700 million to the countries in the Northern Triangle to determine the best way to keep people from coming is keep them from wanting to leave.

And the reason why so many people were leaving, we learned, was that not only gang violence and trafficking and cartels, but natural disasters, hurricanes, floods, earthquakes. And so it's not like someone sits around a hand-hewn table somewhere in Guatemala and says: "I've got a great idea: Let's sell everything we have, give the money to a coyote, have him take our kids or us to the border of America, take us across, leave us in the desert. We don't speak the language.

Won't that be fun?"

And one of the ways we learned is that if you deal with the problems in country, it benefits everyone. It benefits us, it benefits the people, and it grows the economies there.

Unfortunately, the last administration eliminated that fundingâdid not engage in it, did not use itâeven though there was over $700 million to help get this done. We're reinstituting that program. And there areâas I said, there are many factors as to why people leave in the first place.

But this is the source of one of the reasons why we've had such aâbefore we took office, in the midst of the last administration's somewhat draconian policies of separating children from their parents, et cetera, what happened was that we found that there were a serious spike in the number of people heading to the southern border, even in the midst of that. And as Alejandro can tell you, is that was because there were serious natural disasters that occurred in those countries. They were coming north, and we did nothing to do anyâmuch about it.

So this new surge we're dealing with now started with the last administration, but it's our responsibility to deal with it humanely and to stop what's happening. And so this increase has been consequential, but the Vice President has agreedâamong the multiple other things that I have her leadingâand I appreciate itâagreed to lead our diplomatic effort and work with those

nations to accept the returnees, and enhance migration enforcement at their bordersâat their borders.

We're already talking with Mexico about that; she's already done that. We're going to be dealing with a full team now that we have to be able to deal with the problem here at home, but also to deal with it now in terms of in country.

And I can think of nobody who is better qualified to do this than a formerâthis is a woman who ran the second largest attorney general's office in Americaâafter the U.S.âafter the United States Attorney Generalâin the State of California and has done a great deal upholding human rights, but also fighting organized crime in the process.

So it's not her full responsibility and job, but she's leading the effort, because I think the best thing to do is to put someone who, when he or she speaks, they don't have to wonder about is that where the President is. When she speaks, she speaks for me. Doesn't have to check with me. She knows what she's doing, and I hope we can move this along.

Butâso, Madam Vice President, thank you. I gave you a tough job, and you're smiling, but there's no one better capable of trying to organize this for us.

Vice President Kamala D. Harris. Well, thank you, Mr. President and for having the confidence in me. And there's no question that this is a challenging situation. As the President has said, there are many factors that lead precedent to leave these countries. And while we are clear that people should not come to the border now, we also understand that we will enforce the law and that we alsoâbecause we can chew gum and walk at the same timeâmust address the root causes that cause people to make the trek, as the President has described, to come here.

And I look forward to engaging in diplomacy with government, with private sector, with civil society, and the leaders of each in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras to strengthen democracy and the rule of law and ensure shared prosperity in the region.

We will collaborate with Mexico and other countries throughout the Western hemisphere. And as part of this effort, we expect that we will have collaborative relationships to accomplish the goals the President has and that we share.

I also look forward to working with Members of the Congress who, I think, share our perspective on the need to address root causes for the migration that we've been seeing. And needless to say, the work will not be easy, but it is important work. It is work that we demandâ and the people of our countries, I believe, needâto help stem the tide that we have seen.

So thank you, Mr. President, for your confidence. Thank you.

The President. Well, thank you for willing to do it. Now we're going to get down to business here. And, Ron, who am I turning this over to?

NOTE: The President spoke at 2:14 p.m. in the State Dining Room at the White House. In his remarks, he referred to Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas; and White House Chief of Staff Ronald A. Klain.

Categories: Addresses and Remarks : Immigration, meeting. Locations: Washington, DC.

Names: Becerra, Xavier; Harris, Kamala D.; Klain, Ronald A.; Mayorkas, Alejandro N.

Subjects: Central America : Migrants to U.S, influx; Congress : Bipartisanship; Diseases : Coronavirus, domestic prevention efforts; Economy, national : Strengthening efforts; Foreign policy, U.S. : Diplomatic efforts, expansion; Foreign policy, U.S. : Foreign aid policies and

funding; Health and Human Services, Department of : Secretary; Homeland Security, Department of : Secretary; Immigration and naturalization : Illegal immigration; Immigration and naturalization : Reform; Mexico : Relations with U.S.; White House Office : Assistants to the President :: Chief of Staff; White House Office : Vice President.

DCPD Number: DCPD202100254.