At the U.S-Mexico border, residents want Donald Trump to fulfill his promises
GRANJENO — When Elizabeth Olivarez goes to the gym in the morning, she has her guard up. The yards and fields of her small Texas town are a well-trodden path for people who illegally crossed the border.
The 67-year-old has lived in her Granjeno home near the edge of the United States border with Mexico for 45 years, but a surge of migrants during the Biden administration left her on edge.
“It’s horrible,” Olivarez says. “Like you would see one (person)… and you call border patrol and they wind up bringing like two buses because there were so many people.”
Nearby, a long stretch of Donald Trump’s border wall, a large concrete barrier atop an earthen levee, serves as a daily reminder of the president-elect’s promises on security and immigration.