(The Wall Street Journal) Immigrant children and families are again heading north to the U.S.-Mexico border in increasing numbers after a lull, signaling the possibility of a fresh humanitarian crisis and an early challenge for the incoming Biden administration.
The flow of these migrants, who historically have come to seek asylum at the border, had slowed in the past year after the Trump administration made policy changes that cut off access to the asylum system. The coronavirus pandemic, which prompted a wave of lockdowns across Latin America, also hindered people from traveling.
But in October, 4,630 unaccompanied children were taken into custody by border patrol agents, up from 712 in April, while 4,501 migrants traveling as families arrived in October, compared with 716 in April, U.S. Customs and Border Protection data show.