The Phnom Penh Post

‘Immediate deportatio­ns’ if Trump wins presidency

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REPUBLICAN presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump linked illegal immigratio­n and employment on Saturday, pledging to start deporting offenders as soon as he is sworn in should he become the White House’s next occupant.

Trump all the while courted the black vote, claiming that the shooting of basketball star Dwyane Wade’s cousin will make African Americans support him, but the move instead triggered a firestorm of criticism.

“On Day One, I am going to begin swiftly removing criminal illegal immigrants from this country – including removing the hundreds of thousands of criminal illegal immigrants that have been released into US communitie­s under the ObamaClint­on administra­tion,” Trump told supporters in Des Moines, Iowa.

Trump’s Democratic rival Hillar y Clinton served as secretary of state during President Barack Obama’s first term in office. The next president will be sworn in on January 20.

“I am going to build a great border wall, institute nationwide e-verify, stop illegal immigrants from accessing welfare and entitlemen­ts and develop an exit-entry tracking system to ensure those who overstay their visas are quickly removed,” Trump warned. The billionair­e real estate magnate and former reality TV host – in a white baseball cap – said: “If we don’t enforce visa expiration dates, then we have an open border. It’s as simple as that.”

“A vote for Trump is a vote to have a nation of laws, a vote for Clinton is a vote for open borders.”

Details of Trump’s immigratio­n policies remain scant. He rallied much of his primary support with a hardline tone against illegal immigrants and his plan to build a wall on the Mexican border.

Some of his advisers are now reportedly urging him to tone down his signature policy priority.

Trump also made appeals to black voters, promising to help African Americans find jobs.

“Every time an African American citizen, or any citizen, loses their job to an illegal immigrant, the rights of that American citizen have been totally violated,” Trump argued.

Hours before, Trump had tweeted: “Dwayne Wade’s cousin was just shot and killed walking her baby in Chicago,” initially misspellin­g the basketball player’s first name before correcting it later. “Just what I have been saying. African-Americans willVOTE TRUMP!” He was referring to the shooting death on Friday of Nykea Aldridge during an exchange of gunfire between two men as she pushed a baby stroller in Chicago.

Trump’s comments unleashed a torrent of criticism spearheade­d by actor Don Cheadle, who has starred in such films as Hotel Rwanda (2004), denouncing the bombastic billionair­e for trying to score political points on the back of a murder.

“He doesn’t give a fkk. More red meat to his altright troglodyte­s,” Cheadle wrote on Twitter, referring to an ultra-conservati­ve movement largely seen as white supremacis­t and anti-Semitic.

“You don’t get to cherry pick. All the architects on left and right have failed that city. But Drumpf ain’t the ansr.”

 ?? DARREN MCCOLLESTE­R/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump.
DARREN MCCOLLESTE­R/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump.

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