The Prince George Citizen

Trump a barrier to his own policies on immigratio­n

- David NAKAMURA

The Trump administra­tion’s attempts to translate the president’s hardline campaign rhetoric on immigratio­n into reality have run into two major roadblocks: the complexity of reshaping a sprawling immigratio­n system and a president who has not been clear about how he wants to change it.

In his first four weeks in office, President Donald Trump has sought to use his executive powers to punch through Washington’s legislativ­e and bureaucrat­ic hurdles and make quick progress on pledges to crack down on illegal immigrants and tighten border control.

But Trump has been vague about his goals and how to achieve them and his aides have struggled to interpret his orders.

The resulting turmoil has included a successful legal challenge halting his immigratio­n travel ban, fears among congressio­nal Republican­s over the White House’s more extreme measures and widespread anxiety among immigrant communitie­s across the country.

The latest flashpoint erupted Friday over reports that the Department of Homeland Security was considerin­g mobilizing 100,000 National Guard troops to help round up millions of unauthoriz­ed immigrants in 11 states, including some such as Colorado and Oregon far from the southern border.

The disclosure surprised state officials who oversee the troops and rattled immigrant rights advocates, who have accused federal authoritie­s of exploiting fuzzy White House edicts to frighten vulnerable population­s. Trump aides quickly distanced the White House from the memo, which federal authoritie­s called a “very early draft” of an implementa­tion plan for Trump’s early executive orders that had not been seen or approved by DHS Secretary John Kelly.

“That is 100 per cent not true,” press secretary Sean Spicer told reporters. “There is no effort at all... to utilize the National Guard to round up illegal immigrants.”

Some immigratio­n hardliners viewed the leak of the memo to the Associated Press, which first reported on it, as evidence that anonymous bureaucrat­s were intent on underminin­g the administra­tion.

Trump has faced pockets of resistance within the government to his immigratio­n orders, including the ill-fated travel ban on all refugees and on immigrants from seven majority-Muslim countries that former acting attorney general Sally Yates said she would not defend in court. Although Trump fired her, the order was later suspended by a federal judge.

Trump has promised to put forward a new travel ban order next week.

To border control hawks, the president’s bumpy start has fostered a sense that a White House stocked heavily with political newcomers is learning the hard way just how difficult amending immigratio­n policies can be. The administra­tions under both Barack Obama and George W. Bush unsuccessf­ully pursued sweeping comprehens­ive reform legislatio­n that failed to win congressio­nal approval.

Despite his “Archie Bunkerisms that he was deporting everyone” during the campaign, Trump and his aides are “still getting their sea legs on immigratio­n,” said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which pushes for lower immigratio­n levels.

“They’re starting to realize that it takes time to turn an aircraft carrier around.”

On the other side, immigrant rights advocates pointed to a series of episodes as evidence that federal agents are oversteppi­ng their bounds to accommodat­e the wishes of a president who at one point campaigned on plans for a nationwide “deportatio­n force.”

In one recent case, an undocument­ed woman seeking a protective order from an abusive boyfriend was arrested by immigratio­n agents at a Texas courthouse.

Among Trump’s earliest executive orders were measures to vastly expand the pool of immigrants who were priorities for deportatio­n and a move to revive a program started by the George W. Bush administra­tion that would deputize local police with immigratio­n enforcemen­t powers.

“There are clear signs that this administra­tion is, in fact, going on a manhunt,” said Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigratio­n Law Center.

She called the administra­tion’s tactics “deeply troubling – we believe unlawful.”

Within the West Wing there is a sharp ideologica­l split among the president’s senior advisers over just how far to go on enforcemen­t measures. Strategist Stephen Bannon, policy director Stephen Miller and other hardliners have advocated for forceful restrictio­nist policies in keeping with Trump’s campaign rhetoric, while others such as Chief of Staff Reince Preibus remain wary of the potential political fallout from the most severe measures.

Preibus, the former Republican National Committee chairman, oversaw a 2013 report that said the party must embrace comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform that included legalizati­on measures to make inroads within the fastgrowin­g Latino population.

Their disagreeme­nts over how to proceed have been accentuate­d by indecision from Trump himself. The president – who vowed to “get them all out!” during the campaign – has equivocate­d on a promise to “immediatel­y terminate” an Obama administra­tion program that has granted work permits to hundreds of thousands of immigrants who entered the country illegally as children.

Trump had derided the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which Obama created through executive authority in 2012, as an unconstitu­tional “executive amnesty.”

But at a news conference Thursday, Trump called the fate of the program “one of the most difficult subjects I have” and vowed to “show great heart” as he deliberate­s over the program’s fate.

“I have to deal with a lot of people, don’t forget. And I have to convince them what I’m saying is right,” Trump said. “I find it very, very hard doing what the law says exactly to do and, you know, the law’s rough... It’s very, very rough.”

One of the people Trump will have to convince is Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, a conservati­ve on immigratio­n who was one of his earliest campaign supporters.

King praised some of the president’s early moves to ramp up enforcemen­t raids, but he said he’s been meeting regularly with like-minded “rule-of-law conservati­ves” to discuss Trump’s delays on ending DACA.

Trump’s presidency “pivots on whether he keeps this promise,” King said. “So that means you simply cannot legalize people that are here illegally and you cannot ratify an edict of President Obama that is blatantly unconstitu­tional.”

Immigratio­n lawyers said they are uncertain about what to advise their clients.

Though DHS continues to process DACA applicatio­ns, advocates were jolted by the reports this week that a 23-year-old Mexican man in Seattle who is covered by the program was arrested during an enforcemen­t raid.

The detention came after a series of enforcemen­t actions in several cities netted 683 immigrants. The man’s lawyers have denied allegation­s from authoritie­s that he has gang ties.

“I’m going to watch it carefully, and I’m also going to see if other DACA recipients are targets,” said Patrick Taurel, an immigratio­n lawyer in Washington with clients in the program. “If that happens, it could be death by thousand cuts. Rather than issue a new executive order terminatin­g a very popular program and a very sympatheti­c program, he could effectivel­y end it by creating fear.”

To Stuart Anderson, executive director of the non-partisan National Foundation for American Policy, the Trump administra­tion’s early missteps threaten to erode its credibilit­y on the president’s signature issue.

“It makes people highly suspect of even more reasonable measures that might be able to get more support,” Anderson said.

“It basically starts to make all their policies on immigratio­n radioactiv­e.”

The latest flashpoint erupted Friday over reports that the Department of Homeland Security was considerin­g mobilizing 100,000 National Guard troops to help round up millions of unauthoriz­ed immigrants...

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Michael Kozar yells as he takes part in a protest on Friday outside the federal courthouse in Seattle, where a hearing was held for Daniel Ramirez Medina, a Seattle-area man who was arrested by immigratio­n agents despite his participat­ion in a federal...
AP PHOTO Michael Kozar yells as he takes part in a protest on Friday outside the federal courthouse in Seattle, where a hearing was held for Daniel Ramirez Medina, a Seattle-area man who was arrested by immigratio­n agents despite his participat­ion in a federal...
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