Press Secretary Sean Spicer said “Mexico will pay for the wall one way or another.”
On Twitter on Tuesday night, Trump reiterated his promise to build a wall along the roughly 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border
The Mexican president said that he will seek to negotiate issues including trade, security and migration, but Mexico will not pay for Donald Trump's border wall
Donald Trump says he'll begin negotiations with Mexico on funding his promised wall along the southern border immediately after he takes office
Ciudad Juárez, where extensive fencing was erected by the U.S. between 2007 and 2010, residents have a more nuanced view of what a wall can mean. They say the fence has both caused and relieved problems in the city and nearby areas
“We're going to build the wall. We're going to end illegal immigration once and for all and we'll find a way to have our neighbors pay for it.” the U.S. Vice President-elect said.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt wrote to Mexican President Manuel Ávila Camacho in 1944, the year the national park was created, to say Big Bend would not be complete until "both sides of the Rio Grande form one great international park"
Fabrice Leggeri, executive director of the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, said that building physical barriers does not solve the underlying problems that are causing migration: poverty and conflict
Trump, who will be inaugurated Jan. 20, has vowed to deport millions of undocumented immigrants, fence off Mexico with a border wall and threatened to rip up the NAFTA
Mexican Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz Massieu said the country's government would not pay for Trump's proposed wall along the U.S. border