Arizona sends National Guard to border to help with migrants - Los Angeles Times
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Arizona’s governor is sending the state’s National Guard to the border to help with a migrant influx

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer tries to control migrants
A U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer tries to control migrants who entered the country through gaps in the border wall Dec. 5 in Lukeville, Ariz.
(Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press)
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Arizona’s governor on Friday ordered the state’s National Guard to the border with Mexico to help federal officials manage an influx of migrants.

Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs said she issued the executive order because “the federal government is refusing to do its job to secure our border and keep our communities safe.

“I am taking action where the federal government won’t,” Hobbs added.

It was unclear when the troops would arrive at the border or how many would be mobilized.

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Hobbs last week asked President Biden’s administration to mobilize 243 Arizona National Guard troops already in the Border Patrol’s Tucson sector, which includes Lukeville, Ariz., to help federal officers reopen the border crossing that was indefinitely closed Dec. 4.

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Customs and Border Protection has said shutting down the official crossing was necessary to allow personnel stationed there to help Border Patrol agents manage the hundreds of migrants illegally crossing daily.

Although remote, the crossing is a popular route for Arizonans traveling to the Mexican resort of Puerto Peñasco, or Rocky Point, about 62 miles south of the border on the northern shores of the Sea of Cortez.

Hobbs said the National Guard members will be stationed at multiple locations along the southern border, including around Lukeville.

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There, they will support state and local agencies engaged in law enforcement, including interdiction of illegal drugs and human trafficking.

The San Miguel crossing located farther east on the Tohono O’odham Nation is also seeing hundreds of migrant arrivals daily, but tribal officials said the National Guard would not be stationed on the reservation.

“We are in close communication with Gov. Hobbs on this issue,” said Verlon Jose, chairman of the Tohono O’odham Nation. “We made clear that no National Guard would be deployed to the nation, and her office has agreed. Today’s action by the governor is a necessary step in addressing the current crisis at the border.”

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Hobbs said the Biden administration had not responded to her request that the U.S. government reimburse Arizona for border security spending.

Customs and Border Protection officials said they did not have an immediate response to the governor’s decision.

The Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs confirmed Friday afternoon that it was activating National Guard members.

Major Gen. Kerry L. Muehlenbeck, who oversees the Arizona National Guard, noted that the force in September wrapped up a 30-month active-duty mission providing support to law enforcement agencies in southern Arizona. Muehlenbeck said the mission provided logistics, administrative, cyber and medical support.

U.S. Rep. Raul M. Grijalva, a Democrat who represents southern Arizona, said he disagreed with Hobbs’ executive order.

“But I do appreciate that Gov. Hobbs has rejected the brutal and cruel tactics of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott who have taken advantage of this crisis to inhumanely and illegally use migrants as political pawns and to politicize and pander instead of working on real solutions,” Grijalva said in a statement.

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