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In spring 2021, leaders of U.S. President Joe Biden's administration scrambled for solutions to an increase of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border. Meanwhile, rumors circulated about the new president's message to those people. Specifically, social media posts, like the one displayed below, claimed Biden urged migrants to avoid making the trip to southern border crossings altogether. The claim was true at face value, though it lacked necessary context to fully comprehend why Biden made the statement. During an interview with ABC News' George Stephanopoulos that broadcast on March 16, the president indeed said don't come to migrants considering the trip due to the bottleneck of people currently waiting at border patrol facilities (in part because the COVID-19 pandemic) and the new administration's proposed plans to reform the asylum-seeking process. Before we analyze that media appearance, let this be clear: The numbers of both unaccompanied children and families seeking asylum and waiting for court hearings at the southern border in spring 2021, under Biden, were lower than they were at various points during the Trump administration, according to The Associated Press. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data, compiled by The Washington Post, found an annual seasonal bump of migrants at the border during cooler months. Now, let's focus on Biden's comments during the ABC interview. According to a transcript and video recording of the media appearance, the latter of which we obtained via ABC's website, the president said border officials were indeed instructed to send adult migrants back to their home countries -- denying them access to the U.S. -- and attempting to connect unaccompanied children with social services. Simultaneously, he said his administration was trying to establish a new system for people to register for asylum, though he did not provide specifics or an exact timeline for when those changes would take effect. (Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas elaborated on the efforts in an interview with NPR about one month earlier, saying nongovernmental organizations were preparing to identify applicants for asylum based on the severity of their situations and then allow them to register for the status via electronic portals.) Then, Stephanopoulos and Biden had the following exchange: In other words, while Biden indeed cautioned people against making the trip to border crossings in March 2021, his comments implied that he would take a different stance in the future when his administration completed its rollout of changes to the country's asylum-seeking process. Days after that interview, the U.S. Embassy to Haiti used its official Twitter account to highlight several of Biden's quotes during the ABC interview -- such as, I can say quite clearly, don't come over -- in both English and Haitian Creole. Considering that evidence, specifically the video interview of Biden with Stephanopoulos, we rate this claim True. It was not the first -- nor the last -- instance of a member of the Biden administration or the president himself cautioning migrants against making the trip to U.S.-Mexico border crossings. During his Feb. 12 interview with NPR, for example, Mayorkas said of people attempting to flee Honduras, Guatemala, or neighboring countries: It's a very, very important cautionary note that they should not travel to the border.
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