http://apnews.myway.com/article/20040307/D815CPG00.html

President Bush gave Mexican President Vicente Fox a gift to take home
on Saturday: his pledge to exempt certain frequent Mexican visitors
from onerous new security checks at the U.S. border.
The visit by Fox to Bush's Central Texas ranch, held a year and a half
after it was originally scheduled, was designed to lay past disputes
to rest. But with Bush eager to boost his standing in the U.S.
Hispanic community, the nation's fastest-growing voting bloc, American
politics were never far from the agenda.

Bush used the leaders' joint appearance before Mexican and American
reporters to make clear how he sees the November election, in which he
almost certainly will face Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. "The question is
who brings forth the best pro-growth policies ... who (is) best to
lead this country in the war on terror," Bush said.

Over intimate meals, relaxed discussions and an early-morning drive
through wintertime-lush canyons to some of Bush's favorite spots on
his 1,600-acre property, Bush and Fox aimed to look forward, not back.

The warm ties that characterized the two leaders' relationship three
years ago had soured after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Bush
shelved work on a migration accord coveted by Mexico; Fox abruptly
backed out of a planned visit to Bush's ranch in August 2002 over a
death-penalty dispute and refused to back Bush at the United Nations
on an Iraq war.

On Saturday, side-by-side in casual clothes and the warm March sun,
horses and cows grazing placidly in a meadow behind them, the two men
sought to project an air of cooperation on immigration, trade, Haiti
and anti-terrorism measures. Neither publicly mentioned other divisive
matters - such as the water Mexico owes the United States or a
continued disagreement over Mexicans on death row in the United
States - that still divide the North American neighbors.

"Mexico and the United States are more than neighbors," Bush said
Saturday, sprinkling Spanish throughout his remarks. "We are partners
in building a safer, more democratic and more prosperous hemisphere."

Still, there was very little of the effusive mutual admiration that
usually features prominently in Bush's appearances with world leaders.

Though immigration issues were foremost on Fox's mind, he left Texas
with some new assurances but no ironclad agreements.

Under the US-VISIT program, already in use at many airports and
seaports, visitors from certain countries must be fingerprinted and
photographed before entering the United States. When the system is
expanded later this year to the busiest land entry points as well, it
would ensnare the many Mexicans who regularly travel back and forth
with so-called border-crossing cards.

Fox said the fingerprinting and photograph requirement now won't apply
for border-crossing card holders, celebrating "the news that was
confirmed today with regard to visitors to the U.S. from Mexico."

Fox also applauded work by the two leaders to advance a proposal Bush
offered in January to give temporary visas to illegal immigrants, most
from Mexico, already working in the United States.

But Bush was pessimistic about the prospects for congressional passage
of his temporary worker proposal - saying "there's no telling what's
going to happen in an election year." Also, he said little about the
border-crossing issue while his aides signaled it is far from settled.

Bush told Fox in their Saturday morning meeting that he is committed
to the exemption, though details still need to be worked out, White
House spokesman Sean McCormack said. However, McCormack wouldn't
confirm that the remaining issues were merely technical, saying the
matter is extraordinarily complex, and could not offer a timetable for
a final agreement.

On Friday, the White House said it was strongly considering a proposal
under which the multi-use visas that those frequent Mexican travelers
have could be used in place of the US-VISIT checks at the border
checks. The documents already require background checks,
fingerprinting and photographs.

"We will work to ensure a system of safe and orderly migration," Bush
said. "We're making progress."

"President Bush has invited Vicente Fox back to the ranch in Crawford.
An immigration proposal long-awaited by Latinos has been laid on the
table. It must be an election year," said New Mexico Gov. Bill
Richardson, a Democrat who has been talked about as a possible Kerry
running mate.

Bush defended his handling of the economy against Kerry's attacks and
a new report that showed U.S. payrolls increased by only 21,000 jobs
last month, about 100,000 fewer than expected. Without mentioning
Kerry by name, Bush implied the Massachusetts senator would raise
taxes and derail the economic improvements Bush has overseen.

"Raising taxes will make it harder for people to find work," the
president told reporters.

Kerry, who said while campaigning only a couple hundred miles away in
Houston on Saturday that Bush has left the nation in economic ruin,
has called for repealing the portions of Bush's tax cut that went to
wealthy taxpayers. Bush characterizes that as a tax increase.

"George Bush is a walking contradiction and a walking barrel of broken
promises," Kerry said.

The president also didn't shrink from his campaign's use of images
from the Sept. 11 attacks in his first round of campaign ads. Some
victims' families have said the pictures' use for political gain is
offensive.

"How this administration handled that day as well as the war on terror
is worthy of discussion," he said.


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