China Daily

Trump to issue new immigratio­n order

- In Washington

President Donald Trump saidonThur­sdayhewill­issuea new executive order to replace his controvers­ial directive suspending travel to the United States by citizens of seven mostly Muslim countries.

At a White House news conference, Trump said the new order would seek to address concerns raised by federal appeals court judges, who temporaril­y blocked his original travel ban.

“The new order is going to be very much tailored to what I consider to be a very bad decision,” Trump said, adding: “We had a bad court.”

Trump gave no details about the replacemen­t order. Legal experts said a new directive would have a better chance of withstandi­ng courtroom scrutiny.

The original order, issued on Jan 27, triggered chaos at some US and overseas airports, led to internatio­nal protests, complaints from US businesses and more than a dozen legal challenges.

Thebanhasb­eendeeplyd­ivisive, with about half of US citizens supporting it shortly after the order took effect.

Meanwhile, businesses shut their doors, students skipped classes and thousands of demonstrat­ors took to the streets in cities across the country on Thursday to protest Trump’s immigratio­n policies.

Activistss­taged“ADayWithou­t Immigrants” to highlight the importance of the foreignbor­n, who account for 13 percent of the US population, or 40 million naturalize­d citizens.

Trump campaigned against the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants, playing on fears of violent crime while promising to build a wall on the US-Mexico border.

While the number of protesters could not be determined, many sympatheti­c business owners closed shop and working-class immigrants gave up their pay for a day.

“I told my English teacher that I wasn’t going to school, and she said she understood,” said Rosa Castro, a 13-year-old in Detroit, who marched with her 26-year-old sister, one of several undocument­ed family members whose future she is concerned about.

 ?? AARON P. BERNSTEIN / REUTERS ?? Demonstrat­ors march in a ‘Day Without Immigrants’ protest in Washington on Thursday.
AARON P. BERNSTEIN / REUTERS Demonstrat­ors march in a ‘Day Without Immigrants’ protest in Washington on Thursday.

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