Townhall Celebrates America 250
I'm Proud to Be an American
The Republic at 250 and the Merchants of Chaos
Can We Restore the Principles of 1776?
America Is Worth Fighting For
The Pursuit of Happiness Is a Pursuit Not a Promise
True Individual Freedom: A Black Student's Brilliant Observation
Patriotism Is Alive and Well on America's 250th Birthday
Zohran Mamdani Delivers Socialist Manifesto to Celebrate America 250
Supreme Court’s ‘Slaughter’ Decision Is a Historic Gift of American Independence
AIPAC Should Bring Back Its Policy Conference
Water, Water Everywhere—or Maybe Not
The Militia That Wasn't: What the Founders Really Meant and Why Bruen Got...
The World Cup Is a Big Win for America. But Are We Losing...
America Is Already Celebrating 250 Years of Freedom—and the Displays Are Spectacular
Tipsheet

Another Caravan Is Scheduled to Arrive at the Border Just In Time For Trump's State of the Union Address

Another Caravan Is Scheduled to Arrive at the Border Just In Time For Trump's State of the Union Address

The second Central American caravan has been heading towards the United States-Mexico border for awhile. This new caravan was originally supposed to have roughly 2,000 people on it. According to Mexico, that number has multiplied and currently sits around 12,000. The caravan is expected to arrive at the border on Monday, in plenty of time for President Donald Trump's Tuesday State of the Union address, Fox News reported. To intensify orders, the Pentagon recently announced an additional 3,750 troops were being deployed to the border.

Advertisement

This new caravan began on Jan. 15 in Honduras. Their final stopping point will be in Piedras Negras, Mexico, right along the Texas border, where Mexican officials have established shelters for the caravan riders. If the United States refuses to grant the riders asylum, some riders plan to cross into the United States illegally.

“For security reasons, I cannot say which way we're going to take,” El Salvadorian Antonio Morales told Fox News. “Plus, if Mr. Donald Trump is watching, I can't tell you where I'm going to go to get into your country."

The governor of Coahuila Miguel Riquelme, the state where the shelters are established, welcomed the caravan riders and provided them with food, shelter, phone calls, haircuts and health care.

Jose Fraustro, the Secretary of Coahuila, said the caravan should have been kept along Mexico's southern border instead of allowing the riders to trek an additional 1,300 miles. Now, the riders are facing health issues and long waits to get into the United States under an asylum claim. 

Advertisement

Caravan riders have had respiratory infections and gastrointestinal conditions. There have been five cases of chicken pox, one individual with HIV and one case of swine flu.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement