Saturday, February 17, 2001
Bush and Fox Broach Issue of Migration
By EDWIN CHEN, JAMES F. SMITH,

SAN CRISTOBAL, Mexico--President Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox
on Friday pledged a "full, mature and equitable partnership of
prosperity," heralding "a new day" in their two countries' relations.
    As a first step, the fledgling presidents launched formal
negotiations to develop a broad framework for addressing the contentious
issue of immigration-- including a possible "guest worker" program for
temporary migrant workers.

    The talks are to be headed by Secretary of State Colin L.
Powell and Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft, and by Mexican Foreign Minister
Jorge Castaneda and Interior Secretary Santiago Creel.     Their
mandate, the presidents said at their shirt-sleeves summit at the Fox
family ranch here in central Mexico, is to create "an orderly framework
for migration that ensures humane treatment [and] legal security, and
dignifies labor conditions."

    "I believe this is a great advancement on what we had
before," Fox said.

    The Mexican president, who has said the ultimate goal should
be an open border between the two countries, said, "Certainly, there is
a new attitude, a new, much more positive way of seeing things, in
dealing with migration."

    And Bush said to his Mexican audience: "I trust your
president. He's the kind of man you can look in the eye and you know
he's shooting straight with you."
    A senior Mexican official called the summit a "purely
substantive meeting," in which the two presidents delved into specifics
on serious issues.

    For Mexico, the official said, "the main point from our
perspective is the conceptual breakthrough on immigration, that we now
place this squarely on the U.S.-Mexican agenda. This is a huge change."
     But the talks here were somewhat overshadowed by news
from the Middle East. On a day when Bush was selling amity south of the
border on his first trip abroad as president, U.S. warplanes struck
Iraqi radar installations near Baghdad.

     Asked about the timing of those attacks, Bush defended
his action as a "routine mission" to enforce the "no-fly" zones in the
north and south of Iraq.

     Fox declined to be drawn into the debate, saying tersely
during a joint news conference, "I do not have a position or a statement
on that topic." Asked if the bombings detracted from the visit, Fox
said, "I see no reason why we should connect one event with the other
one."

     The two leaders said they spent considerable time Friday
discussing energy issues, including California's electricity shortage.
     And in his public comments after their meeting, Bush
demonstrated that he no longer views the energy crisis as a problem
restricted to California, or even the West. "It is a hemispheric issue,
and it needs to be elevated to the presidential level," he said.
     Bush said he and Fox discussed the possibility of
creating "a common policy whereby no one takes advantage of the other."
The U.S. leader said a North American energy policy could help ease
California's crisis in part by making more electricity available from
the Mexican state of Baja California.

     "We did talk about power, the generation of power--the
possibility as to whether or not in Baja, for example, more power could
be added to the Western grid," Bush said. "It's an obvious opportunity,
if possible."

     But the joint statement made clear that a series of
obstacles must be addressed. Those include Mexican constitutional
barriers to private investment in the energy sector and Mexico's
inability to meet its own energy needs.

     Both leaders made clear that the goal of the meeting was
to establish a basis for cooperation during their presidencies rather
than to reach specific agreements. The men's ease with each other was
evident in their joint news conference after the formal talks, a
relatively comfortable first trip abroad for the U.S. president.
     "I want you to understand that we consider you a friend
of Mexico, a friend of the Mexican people and a friend of mine," Fox
said.

     Bush replied in passable Spanish, "It makes me feel that
I am among family."

     On the issue of fighting drug trafficking, Bush declined
to specify whether he would seek to exempt Mexico from the annual
process in which the U.S. certifies foreign countries as cooperative.
Mexicans consider the certification process an insulting interference in
their domestic affairs.

     But Bush noted that "there is a movement in the country
to review the certification process" and added that he would bring home
to Congress a message of confidence in Fox's commitment to fight
traffickers.

     The migration issue is an extremely emotional one for
Mexico, given the annual stream of young Mexicans who cross into the
U.S. each year seeking work. More than 1.5 million Mexicans are arrested
each year trying to cross illegally, and nearly 400 a year die in the
attempt.

     Fox has pushed for an integrated agreement on migration
that would include an organized flow of authorized temporary workers
into the United States and an effort to end abuses by migrant-smuggling
syndicates.

     Bush appeared to respond to that sentiment, saying, "We
exchanged ideas about safe and orderly migration, a policy that respects
individuals on both sides of the border."      Condoleezza
Rice, Bush's national security advisor, said after the meeting that the
two presidents "share the same goals. They believe that people need to
be treated humanely. They believe that people need to be able to have
the fruits of their labor, and they believe that the economic benefits
to both countries need to be recognized."

     Bush had departed a rainy Washington before dawn,
arriving in the city of Leon after a 4 1/2-hour flight. After a brief
airport ceremony, Bush and Fox drove to the Fox family's hacienda in San
Cristobal, where Bush met the president's mother, Mercedes Quesada, whom
he kissed on the cheek.

     Bush, by then tie-less, presented her with a shawl and a
photograph of him and his wife, First Lady Laura Bush.
     The two men then went to Fox's nearby weekend home on the
outskirts of San Cristobal, about 210 miles northwest of Mexico City.
Before going inside, Bush and Fox greeted a throng of well-wishers,
including many children.

     At the ranch, both men went even more casual, and later
appeared at their joint news conference in shirt sleeves. Many aides
also went without ties, including Powell and Castaneda.
______________________________

UPDATE 1-Bush to Crawford residents: "Hello neighbors"
18 Feb 2001
By Steve Holland

CRAWFORD, Texas, Feb 18 (Reuters) - President George W. Bush had a
simple message for the hardy Texas folk in this tiny town where he has
his ranch: "I love my job ... but I'll always remember where my home
is."

About 250 of its estimated 700 residents turned out on Saturday night
for the Crawford "inaugural ball" staged for the new president and his
wife, Laura, at the community center, a corrugated iron building on the
edge of town.

It was the only public sighting of the president since his Marine One
helicopter flew over the countryside on Friday night to deposit Bush at
his 1,600-acre (648-hectare) "Prairie Chapel" ranch for his first
weekend here since he was inaugurated on Jan. 20.

Bush had some catching up to do and he did it at warp speed, completing
a running, weightlifting, angling triathalon before noon on Sunday. He
followed that up with a couple of hours cutting wood and clearing brush.

"The president took a three-mile run shortly after 7 a.m., had a quick
breakfast and worked out with weights in the exercise house," said White
House spokesman Gordon Johndroe. "And then he went fishing. That was
before noon."

Stray dogs yapped at Bush's motorcade as it departed for the inaugural
ball, which was scheduled long before the town knew Bush would be here
this weekend. The first couple entered to the playing of "Hail to the
Chief."

TUXES AND TACOS
Some guests wore tuxedos and formal wear, but Bush was in a business
suit, joking to people that he would have worn his tux but had to turn
it in because the rental had run out on it.

The menu was tacos, rice and beans, and cookies made from Mrs. Bush's
favorite recipe. Each table had black boots as a centerpiece. The Boy
Scouts led the pledge of allegiance to the flag and a high school boy
sang the national anthem.

Bush's parents, George and Barbara Bush, were not there. But there were
cutouts of the former first couple, and people posed for pictures with
them.

"Hello neighbors," Bush told the crowd, according to participants who
paid $25 to attend.

The media was kept out during Bush's visit and shared the front lawn
with a fearsome Longhorn steer named Frito tethered to a spindly tree
and fenced in by a string of Christmas lights. Frito was trucked in to
add that extra Texas touch.
At least one guest videotaped Bush's appearance and shared it with
reporters.

"Home is important. It's important to have a home," the president said.
"I'm going to come back as often as I can, for a lot of reasons ... for
one, I want to stay in touch with real Americans."

Bush, no fan of dancing, managed to do his version of an inaugural waltz
with the first lady for the crowd, but he did not less grass grow under
his feet. He was in and out of the party in about 12 minutes.










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