MEXICO CITY — After Dominican President Luis Abinader coasted into a second term over the weekend, he promised in a nationalistic speech that ''the best is yet to come.''
But as one of the region's most popular leaders spoke of economic prosperity and constitutional reforms, he notably left one thing out: the crisis in neighboring Haiti.
The Dominican Republic has long taken a hard-line stance with Haitian migrants, but harsh crackdowns have increased in recent years as Haiti's spiraling gang violence drives people to flee.
Analysts like Michael Shifter, a senior fellow at the Inter-American Dialogue, say Abinader has used the crisis as a political tool to ''play on people's fears.''
"Most Dominicans overwhelmingly believe that Abinader has done a good job. ... They're not prepared to take a risk on somebody else," Shifter said. ''His very hard-line, nationalistic posture on Haiti, while it's not the only reason he won, it has lifted and cemented his political support.''
Now, as Haiti's transitional government attempts to establish order and Abinader enters another four years in power, the question remains: What comes next for the neighbors? Some hope Abinader will soften his stance.
The Dominican Republic shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, which has descended into chaos and gang warfare since the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse. Abinader's government has built a wall along its 250-mile border with Haiti and deported at least 175,000 Haitians fleeing crisis last year alone. They included unaccompanied minors and other vulnerable populations.
The crackdown has brought accusations from human rights groups that say Abinader's policies are racist and in violation of international law. They estimate around 130,000 people of Haitian descent remain ''stateless'' in the country, without access to basic citizenship rights due to Dominican Republic's birthright citizenship laws.