Current:Home > NewsNYC mayor to residents of Puebla, Mexico: ‘Mi casa es su casa,’ but ‘there’s no more room’ -Ascend Finance Compass
NYC mayor to residents of Puebla, Mexico: ‘Mi casa es su casa,’ but ‘there’s no more room’
View
Date:2025-04-18 17:13:41
PUEBLA, Mexico (AP) — New York City Mayor Eric Adams brought a mix of messages to central Mexico’s Puebla state on Thursday, as he tried to carefully walk the line of mayor of a city known for welcoming migrants from around the world, but currently struggling with a continuing influx of asylum seekers.
Inside Puebla’s ornate state congress building, decked floor-to-ceiling in cream-yellow Portuguese tiles broken only by Greco-Roman columns, Adams focused on the ties binding his city and a Mexican state that has sent some 800,000 of its people to New York over the years.
But later, talking to reporters, Adams again returned to the refrain that he has carried on his Latin America trip: New York is “at capacity.”
“We are neighbors. We are familia. Mi casa es su casa. Your struggles are my struggles,” Adams said inside the legislative chamber shortly after the state governor dubbed him “Mayor of Puebla York.”
“(Migrants) are our future and we cannot lose one of them,” said Adams.
Speaking to reporters immediately afterwards, however, the mayor was more direct.
“There is no more room in New York. Our hearts are endless, but our resources are not,” he said. “We don’t want to put people in congregate shelters. We don’t want people to think they will be employed.”
Adams said around 800,000 immigrants from the state of Puebla live in New York City, which has had to absorb over 120,000 more asylum seekers in the last year.
Late Tuesday, New York City asked a court for the ability to suspend its unique, so-called “right to shelter” agreement that requires it to provide emergency housing to anyone who asks for it.
The filing is the latest in a monthslong attempt to suspend the law which has long made New York a sanctuary city. On Tuesday the Adams administration argued the agreement was never designed for a humanitarian crisis like the city faces today.
Adams said the current crisis has been partly caused by what he called Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s “inhumane” decision last April to send migrants on chartered buses from his state to New York City.
“These are human beings that have traveled in very dangerous terrains. And what he’s doing is exploiting this for political reasons,” said Adams.
In his address to Puebla’s state congress earlier, the mayor emphasized the role of New York City’s migrant community during the pandemic. “During COVID-19 it was your children that kept our stores open, the first responders, transportation professionals, healthcare professionals,” he said. “We survived COVID because your children were in our city.”
After the speeches by Puebla’s governor and the city mayor, members of congress began chanting “Adams hermano, ya eres poblano,” a welcome which translates to “Brother Adams, you are already a Pueblan.”
The mayor began a four-day tour of Latin America on Wednesday evening with a visit to the Basilica of Guadalupe, in Mexico City, a place of worship for many would-be migrants immediately before they begin their journey north.
Over the next two days Adams plans to travel to Quito, Ecuador, and Bogota, Colombia, before visiting the jungle-clad Darien Gap, a particularly dangerous section of the route many migrants take north at the border of Panama and Colombia.
____
Follow AP’s global migration coverage at: https://apnews.com/hub/migration
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- The Masked Singer Marks Actress' Triumphant Return After Near-Death Experience
- Key moments in the Supreme Court’s latest abortion case that could change how women get care
- Sophia Bush Addresses Rumor She Left Ex Grant Hughes for Ashlyn Harris
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Magnet fisher uncovers rifle, cellphone linked to a couple's 2015 deaths in Georgia
- Medical plane crashes in North Carolina, injuring pilot and doctor on board
- Tough new EPA rules would force coal-fired power plants to capture emissions or shut down
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Met Gala: Everything to know about fashion's biggest night – and the sleeping beauties theme
Ranking
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Why Taylor Swift's 'all the racists' lyric on 'I Hate It Here' is dividing fans, listeners
- The Rolling Stones set to play New Orleans Jazz Fest 2024, opening Thursday
- Army reservist who warned about Maine killer before shootings to testify before investigators
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Tesla Fell Behind, Then Leapt Ahead of ExxonMobil in Market Value This Week
- ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ is (almost) ready to shake up the Marvel Cinematic Universe
- Another Republican candidate to challenge Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren
Recommendation
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
Judge declines to dismiss lawsuits filed against rapper Travis Scott over deadly Astroworld concert
Dolphin found dead on a Louisiana beach with bullets in its brain, spinal cord and heart
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Double Date With Gigi Hadid and Bradley Cooper
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
5 things workers should know about the new federal ban on noncompete agreements
Google fires more workers over pro-Palestinian protests held at offices, cites disruption
Donna Kelce Has a Gorgeous Reaction to Taylor Swift’s Tortured Poets Department Album