Montreal Gazette

PROFANE TRUMP RAISES EYEBROWS.

- JENNIFER EPSTEIN ERIK WASSON AND

U.S. President Donald Trump questioned senators in an Oval Office meeting Thursday on why the U.S. accepts immigrants from “shithole countries” like Haiti, El Salvador and African nations rather than places like Norway, according to two people briefed on the conversati­on.

The White House didn’t dispute the quotations. Asked about the account, White House spokesman Raj Shah said “certain Washington politician­s choose to fight for foreign countries, but President Trump will always fight for the American people.”

Trump made the comments in a meeting with lawmakers who suggested restoring protection­s for people from those countries as part of a broader bipartisan agreement on immigratio­n issues, the two people said.

Shah went on to list the White House’s demands for an agreement that would protect undocument­ed immigrants who were brought into the country as children and stressed that the president favours merit-based immigratio­n.

Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, who wasn’t in the meeting, in a tweet called the president’s remarks, “Breathtaki­ngly offensive. Worse, it’s ignorant of American ideals.”

Senators Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, and Richard Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, were among the lawmakers who met with Trump at the White House to present a deal that a small group of lawmakers had reached on immigratio­n issues. The lawmakers discussed restoring protection­s for immigrants from Haiti, El Salvador and African countries, the Washington Post reported, which for nearly three decades have been granted to help people who are temporaril­y unable to return to their countries because of disasters or other conditions. The administra­tion announced this week that it would end the protection for people from El Salvador in 2019.

“Why are we having all these people from shithole countries come here?” Trump said, according to the Post, which quoted two people briefed on the meeting. Trump suggested the U.S. should instead accept more people from countries like Norway, whose prime minister he met with Wednesday.

Trump was reported in December to have made similarly disparagin­g comments last year about people who had received U.S. visas in 2017. He said that people from Haiti “all have AIDS” while people from Nigeria would never “go back to their huts,” the New York Times said.

Shah said in an email that Trump “is fighting for permanent solutions that make our country stronger by welcoming those who can contribute to our society, grow our economy and assimilate into our great nation. He will always reject temporary, weak and dangerous stopgap measures that threaten the lives of hardworkin­g Americans, and undercut immigrants who seek a better life in the United States through a legal pathway.”

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