Guatemalan congressman calls for US to offer 'trade not aid' to solve illegal immigrant crisis

Investigative reporter Sara Carter held an exclusive interview with Guatemalan Rep. Enrique Montano.

A Guatemalan congressman called for the United States and the Biden administration to offer constructive solutions to the illegal immigration crisis, noting it is not only affecting the U.S. but also countries like Guatemala where the migrants are coming from – in an exclusive interview with Fox News contributor Sara Carter

Carter sat down with Congressman Enrique Montano, a member of the right-wing Unionist Party, who told her that a strong free-trade agreement between Guatemala and the U.S. that is similar to the one President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau forged with Mexico, would go a long way toward solving the systemic problems that are convincing Guatemalans to flee north toward America.

"It's trade, not aid. We don't want handouts. We want the American market to be more open towards us," Montano said.

"The quotas we have in many of our world-class products -- we need more quotas as we need the border to be open… for our products. Then you build a strong Guatemalan economy," he added, referring to the White House calling for billions in taxpayer funds to go to Central America in an effort to solve the crisis.

"Look at Mexico: You had a free trade agreement with them and you helped them. Immigration from Mexico [to the U.S.] has dramatically decreased. Our country's have increased. So what we are talking about -- again, it's the economy," Montano added.

Carter said Montano also brought up something Guatemalan intelligence officials have expressed to her, that if the U.S. does not establish stronger trade agreements with Central America, rival nations like China and Russia swoop in and establish themselves as primary trading partners.

With Venezuela being one regional nation with links to U.S. rival nations, the fear is that America's adversaries could further increase their presence and influence in that region.

"It is actually a national security crisis they say," Carter said of the officials she spoke with.

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Carter's interview comes after Vice President Harris was panned for her summit with Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei, a viewpoint that was further solidified when the ex-California senator snapped at a Univision reporter who pressed her about visiting the U.S.-Mexico border as the crisis there intensifies.

"I'm not finished," Harris bristled at Univision anchor Ilia Calderon, after Calderon pressed her midsentence on the issue. 

"I've said I'm going to the border. And also if we are going to do what the problems at the border, we have to deal with the problems that cause people to go to the border, to flee to the border."

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