Challenges at southern border may be drag on efforts to reopen Canada-U.S. frontier
WASHINGTON — Canadians wondering why the United States doesn’t appear to be rushing to ease travel restrictions at their shared border should cast a gaze further south, where the frontier with Mexico fosters far thornier political questions for the White House than its northern counterpart.
Allowing travel to resume at only one of America’s two shared borders could be seen as playing favourites between the country’s two closest neighbours, observers say. And the risk of a flood of travellers from Mexico would risk exacerbating a long-standing refugee crisis in the southern U.S.
Still, the Biden administration’s stand-pat approach to restricting visitors from Canada, despite the federal Liberal government’s plan to start allowing fully vaccinated U.S. visitors next month, has raised eyebrows in both countries, including among experts.
“It’s a black box on the U.S. side,” said Laurie Trautman, director of the Border Policy Research Institute at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash.


