Border residents show Trump that bridges to Mexico are thicker than walls
PRESIDIO—In an act of binational solidarity in a new age of Trump nationalism, residents from the Big Bend region of West Texas walked from the remote Texas border town of Presidio across the international bridge to Mexico carrying cardboard signs with slogans like: “Build bridges, not walls.”
The Saturday morning march was not on the scale of other demonstrations that have popped up in other cities around the country following the election, but it wasn’t meant to be. Police presence was minimal, and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) personnel barely batted an eye as the 40-some marchers filed through the international port doors.
The group gathered in the middle of the bridge – the dividing line between the United States and Mexico – and waited for their Mexican neighbors while chanting: “Viva la frontera,” or “Long live the border!”
Beneath the bridge, the narrow Rio Grande ran languidly as three horses grazed on the verdant grasses by its edge. For them, the river is only a lifeforce, not as a dividing line.
“We all get along beautifully over here,” said Laurie Holman, a Presidio resident who organized the solidarity march. “That’s what we want to show the world.”
It’s not that folks aren’t shocked or angry by the election results. Presidio, a mostly Hispanic community, was one of a handful of Texas counties that voted overwhelmingly for Hillary Clinton.
That should come as no surprise, considering that much of the antagonistic rhetoric that defined Trump’s campaign targeted their family and friends in Mexico. If Trump makes good on his promises of building a wall and slapping tariffs on Mexico, it would undoubtedly upend people’s way of life here.
But it’s all that angry and divisive rhetoric that inspired folks here to organize a peaceful march.
“We live very peacefully here no matter what you hear or see on the news, on television. We’re one of the safest counties in Texas and we’re right next to Mexico,” Holman said. “We want to show unity, solidarity. We want to show Mexico that we got their back. They’re not alone.”