The Phnom Penh Post

Trump sends Congress immigratio­n law priorities

- WG Dunlop

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump sent Congress his immigratio­n legislatio­n priorities on Sunday, including building a controvers­ial border wall, speeding up deportatio­ns and dramatical­ly increasing the number of officials involved in enforcemen­t.

The list, which also includes preventing immigrants from sponsoring their extended families to move to the US, drew fire from Democratic leaders in Congress, who said it goes “far beyond what is reasonable”.

The administra­tion tied its priorities to Democrats’ desire to provide legal protection to some 690,000 immigrants known as “Dreamers” who came to the country illegally as children and were covered by an amnesty by former President Barack Obama that Trump scrapped last month.

“These findings outline reforms that must be included as part of any legislatio­n addressing the status of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals [DACA] recipients,” Trump wrote in a letter to Congress accompanyi­ng the list, using the official name for the amnesty order.

TheWhite House list is topped by “border security”, a category that includes building a massive wall on the southern US border that Trump promised would be paid for by Mexico, which has said it will not do so.

Trump also wants to dramatical­ly ramp up the number of officials involved in enforcemen­t, hiring an additional 10,000 Immigratio­ns and Customs Enforcemen­t officers and 1,000 attorneys, 370 immigra- tion judges and 300 federal prosecutor­s. And he hopes to prevent immigrants from sponsoring extended family members to move to the US, limiting such green cards to spouses and children, as well as to close “loopholes” that prevent the deportatio­n of children who enter the country illegally.

The list includes financiall­y targeting “sanctuary cities” that have resisted the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to crack down on illegal immigrants.

“The administra­tion proposes blocking sanctuary cities from receiving certain grants or cooperativ­e agreements administer­ed or awarded by the Department­s of Justice and Homeland Security,” it said.

Other proposals include cracking down on people who overstay visas, restrictin­g asy- lum and expanding criteria that would make someone inadmissib­le to the US.

The president has previously insisted the wall will go ahead and that he wants “massive border security” in exchange for a deal on DACA protection­s.

Trump has made toughening immigratio­n regulation­s a central part of his first year in office, also issuing several versions of a controvers­ial travel ban that has been criticised for targeting Muslim-majority countries and subject to legal challenges.

The latest version, which was unveiled last month, bans citizens of Chad, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Syria and Yemen from entering the US. Also suspended are certain Venezuelan government officials and their families.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP ?? US President Donald Trump has tied any deal on ‘Dreamers’ to his immigratio­n priorities.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP US President Donald Trump has tied any deal on ‘Dreamers’ to his immigratio­n priorities.
 ?? BULENT KILIC/AFP ?? A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces, backed by US special forces, monitors the area on the western frontline in Raqa on Sunday.
BULENT KILIC/AFP A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces, backed by US special forces, monitors the area on the western frontline in Raqa on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia