We know how this turned out. An abject failure.
This is the same woman who paid bail for Antifa members after the George Floyd riots. Bring it on libs!
www.latimes.com
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks in Guatemala during a tour of Central America in 2021.
(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
WASHINGTON —
President Biden, facing a political crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border in the early days of his administration, tapped Vice President Kamala Harris to lead a high-profile response that would bet heavily on improving conditions in three Central American countries.
It was known as the “root causes” strategy. The border, administration officials argued, was only a symptom. If the United States could improve economic, security and political conditions in Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, fewer people would risk the perilous journey and much of the problem could be solved, they reasoned.
Three years later, the border crisis has only deepened, with record numbers of migrants from all over the hemisphere overwhelming the border, and a president on the defense as Republicans make immigration a key issue in his reelection campaign.
This is the same woman who paid bail for Antifa members after the George Floyd riots. Bring it on libs!
Kamala Harris was tapped to fix the immigration crisis. Then the problem shifted
Immigration experts say the Biden administration picked the wrong immigration strategy, choosing a plan that failed to anticipate the shifting nature of migration.

Kamala Harris was tapped to fix the immigration crisis. Then the problem shifted
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks in Guatemala during a tour of Central America in 2021.
(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
WASHINGTON —
President Biden, facing a political crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border in the early days of his administration, tapped Vice President Kamala Harris to lead a high-profile response that would bet heavily on improving conditions in three Central American countries.
It was known as the “root causes” strategy. The border, administration officials argued, was only a symptom. If the United States could improve economic, security and political conditions in Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, fewer people would risk the perilous journey and much of the problem could be solved, they reasoned.
Three years later, the border crisis has only deepened, with record numbers of migrants from all over the hemisphere overwhelming the border, and a president on the defense as Republicans make immigration a key issue in his reelection campaign.