You are using an older browser version. Please use a supported version for the best MSN experience.

Trudeau to Press Biden on New York-Quebec Border as Migrants Flow In

Bloomberg logo Bloomberg 2/23/2023 Brian Platt
BRUSSELS, BELGIUM - MARCH 24: Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Joe Biden and Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz pose for a G7 leaders' family photo during a NATO summit on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, at the alliance's headquarters in Brussels, on March 24, 2022 in Brussels, Belgium. Heads of State and Government take part in the North Atlantic Council (NAC) Summit. They will discuss the consequences of President Putin's invasion of Ukraine and the role of China in the crisis. Then decide on the next steps to strengthen NATO's deterrence and defence. (Photo by Henry Nicholls - Pool/Getty Images) © Photographer: Pool/Getty Images Europe BRUSSELS, BELGIUM - MARCH 24: Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Joe Biden and Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz pose for a G7 leaders' family photo during a NATO summit on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, at the alliance's headquarters in Brussels, on March 24, 2022 in Brussels, Belgium. Heads of State and Government take part in the North Atlantic Council (NAC) Summit. They will discuss the consequences of President Putin's invasion of Ukraine and the role of China in the crisis. Then decide on the next steps to strengthen NATO's deterrence and defence. (Photo by Henry Nicholls - Pool/Getty Images)

(Bloomberg) -- Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he and Joe Biden will discuss stemming the flow of irregular migration into Canada when the US President visits Ottawa next month.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Trudeau has been under pressure over the increasing number of asylum seekers entering from the US at a border crossing not far from Champlain, New York. It’s about 40 miles south of Montreal.  

Quebec Premier Francois Legault has said his province doesn’t have the capacity to handle the influx of migrants right now, and wrote a letter to Trudeau asking him to press the issue with Biden. There were nearly 5,000 asylum claims in Quebec in January, according to federal data — far more than any other Canadian province.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Trudeau said he has already raised the matter in direct conversations with Biden, and the president “understands that it is a priority for Canada.”

“This will be a conversation that we will continue to have with the US administration, including during the visit later next month,” Trudeau said in French. Canada and the US have not yet confirmed dates for the visit.

Migration Loophole

The New York-Quebec crossing, known as Roxham Road, is used because it exploits a loophole in a Canada-US pact called the Safe Third Country Agreement. Under this deal, refugees must claim asylum in the first country they enter, and will be turned back at a Canada-US border station if they try to cross there. But since Roxham Road is not an official land port of entry, refugees are able to cross over and then claim asylum within Canada.

Trudeau’s Conservative opponent, Pierre Poilievre, has called on the prime minister to close off the Roxham Road crossing within 30 days, but hasn’t said how he would address the issue of irregular immigration simply moving to another location along the border.

“The problem is we have 6,000 kilometers worth of undefended shared border with the United States,” Trudeau said earlier this week. “People will choose to cross elsewhere.”

Trudeau said he also wants to see Roxham Road closed, but said the only way to do it, in his view, is by renegotiating the Safe Third Country Agreement. “Those are ongoing conversations with the Americans that are continuing to progress,” he said.

But David Cohen, the US ambassador to Canada, said in a TV interview that Roxham Road is only a symptom of an underlying problem, and would not confirm whether the US is in active talks to change the deal.

“It is a mistake to think that you can solve this problem by treating only symptoms,” Cohen told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. “You have to treat the underlying causes of irregular migration.”

--With assistance from Mathieu Dion.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

AdChoices
AdChoices
image beaconimage beaconimage beacon