Amid a continued surge in the number of people crossing the southern border of the United States that officials adamantly refuse to categorise as a “crisis”, White House Press Secretary Jenifer Psaki seemingly broke with the Joe Biden administration’s seeming 'ban' on using the word.
At a Thursday press briefing, Psaki was responding to a question about US plans to offer doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine to Mexico, and whether there might be increased cooperation on immigration matters in response.
"There have been expectations set outside of, unrelated to, any vaccine doses or requests for them, that they would be partners in dealing with the crisis on the border," Psaki said.
Reporters immediately seized upon the rare instance of the word’s use, asking the press secretary:
“When you were talking about how to go about diplomatic negotiations between the United States and Mexico, you said 'crisis on the border'?"
Psaki swiftly sought to cover up her slip of the tongue, quipping, "Challenges on the border."
When further asked whether she had intimated a shift in the administration’s perception of the situation at the border, she added: "Nope."
The latest instance of verbal juggling comes as on a spate of occasions White House officials have refused to perceive the situation developing at the border as a “crisis”.
Netizens ridiculed the ‘tell-tale blunder’, deploring her ‘failed’ efforts to cover up the actual scale of things at the border with Mexico.
This comes as the number of unaccompanied teens and children crossing the US-Mexico border has reached record numbers, sources were cited as saying by ABC News.
As a result, young would-be immigrants are forced to stay longer in overcrowded border facilities, with up to 4,276 children in custody, according to data on 15 March, in a 25 percent increase from 3,400 earlier in the week.
The refusal of the administration to acknowledge the crisis comes as the House passed two bills as part of the sweeping immigration reform announced by Biden.
The American Dream and Promise Act would create a path to citizenship for millions of immigrants known as “Dreamers,” while another - the Farm Workforce Modernization Act - would provide a path to citizenship for certain undocumented farmworkers.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell slammed the bills as potentially encouraging more illegal arrivals.
The current influx of unaccompanied minors on the southern border with Mexico which has led to record numbers of children being held in the government’s detention facilities is believed to echo the 2019 crisis during the tenure of former President Donald Trump.
At the time, Trump had declared an emergency, while the current Biden administration is shying away from acknowledging the “crisis”.
According to US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), 100,441 people attempted to illegally cross the border from Mexico in February, a 28 percent increase on the figure for January.