Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

AP Fact Check: Trump’s distortion­s on immigratio­n

- By Calvin Woodward and Hope Yen

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump spread distorted theories and numbers on immigratio­n in the campaign’s final days while claiming economic gains for minorities that have not been achieved.

A look at 11th hour rhetoric before the elections Tuesday and the reality:

Median income

TRUMP, on attracting the nonwhite vote from Democrats: “We have the best unemployme­nt numbers, the best median income numbers for all of these groups. We have the best numbers we’ve ever had . ... They should be worried about the AfricanAme­ricans, because they’re going to lose them.” — Fox interview Monday.

THE FACTS: He did not achieve the best median income numbers for all the nonwhite groups. Both African-Americans and AsianAmeri­cans had higher income prior to the Trump administra­tion.

The median income last year for a black household was $40,258, according to the Census Bureau. That’s below a 2000 peak of $42,348 and also statistica­lly no better than 2016, President Barack Obama’s last year in office.

Many economists view the continued economic growth since the middle of 2009, in Obama’s first term, as the primary explanatio­n for recent hiring and income gains. More important, there are multiple signs that the racial wealth gap is now worsening even as unemployme­nt rates have come down.

As to Asian-Americans, the median income for a typical household last year was $81,331. It was $83,182 in 2016.

Illegal immigratio­n

TRUMP, on the practice of allowing immigrants caught crossing the border illegally to stay in U.S. communitie­s as they await immigratio­n hearings: “We’re not doing releases. What’s been happening over years is they would come in, release them, and they would never show up for their trial. And we now have 25 or 30 million people in this country illegally, because of what’s been happening over many years.” — remarks Wednesday to reporters.

THE FACTS: It’s nowhere close to 25 million to 30 million, nor has the number increased much in recent years.

The nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center estimates there were 11.3 million immigrants in the U.S. illegally in 2016, the most recent data available. That number is basically unchanged from 2009. Advocacy groups on both sides of the immigratio­n issue have similar estimates.

The number of such immigrants had reached a height of 12.2 million in 2007, representi­ng about 4 percent of the U.S. population, before declining due in part to a weakening U.S. economy.

••• TRUMP, on tweeting a video blaming Democrats allowing a man to enter the U.S. who killed two police officers: “All I’m doing is just telling the truth.” — speaking to reporters Friday.

THE FACTS: The video he spread around does not tell the truth. It says Democrats let Luis Bracamonte­s into the country and “let him stay.”

Bracamonte­s entered the U.S. illegally, in 1996, during the Democratic administra­tion of President Bill Clinton, but he was also deported by that administra­tion the next year after being caught buying crack cocaine and serving his sentence. He returned repeatedly. By the time he was sentenced to death in California for the 2014 killings of the police officers, he had been deported four times, according to Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones.

No evidence of leniency by Democrats has emerged in the episode. Democratic and Republican administra­tions alike have deported hundreds of thousands of people a year and no administra­tion, Trump’s included, has caught everyone trying to enter illegally.

••• TRUMP on what U.S. troops should do if encounteri­ng migrants who are trying to get to the border from Mexico: “I didn’t say shoot, I didn’t say shoot.” — remarks to reporters Friday.

THE FACTS: A day earlier, he said of the migrants: “They want to throw rocks at our military, our military fights back. I told them, consider it a rifle.”

The procession has been largely peaceful. Some migrants in one caravan clashed with Mexican police at the Mexico-Guatemala border, hurling stones.

••• TRUMP: “President Obama separated the children from parents and nobody complained. When we continued the exact same law, the country went crazy.” — immigratio­n speech Thursday.

THE FACTS: Actually, Obama did not do the same thing as a matter of policy.

While it’s true the underlying laws were the same, the Trump administra­tion mandated anyone caught crossing the border illegally was to be criminally prosecuted. That policy meant adults were taken to court for criminal proceeding­s, and their children were separated and sent into the care of the Health and Human Services Department, which is tasked with caring for unaccompan­ied migrant children. Trump’s zero tolerance policy remains in effect, but he signed an executive order June 20 that stopped separation­s.

Jeh Johnson, Obama’s Homeland Security secretary, recently told NPR there may have been unusual or emergency circumstan­ces when children were

taken from parents, but there was no such policy.

••• TRUMP: “At this very moment, large well-organized caravans of migrants are marching towards our southern border. Some people call it an invasion. ...These are tough people in many cases; a lot of young men, strong men and a lot of men that maybe we don’t want in our country . ... This isn’t an innocent group of people. It’s a large number of people that are tough. They have injured, they have attacked.” — immigratio­n speech Thursday.

THE FACTS: He’s given no evidence that people in the caravans are, by and large, dangerous, hardened criminals — after acknowledg­ing at one point that there is no such proof.

The migrants in the caravans are mostly from Honduras, where it started, as well as El Salvador and Guatemala. Overall, they are poor, carrying the belongings that fit into a knapsack and fleeing gang violence or poverty.

It might be true there are some criminals mixed in with the throngs, given the sheer number of migrants. Trump did not substantia­te his claim that members of the MS-13 gang, in particular, are among them. The Homeland Security Department issued a sheet stating that “over 270 individual­s along the caravan route have criminal histories, including known gang membership.” But it did not specify how it had arrived at that number.

Some migrants in one of the caravans clashed with Mexican police at the Mexico-Guatemala border, hurling stones and other objects as they tried to cross the internatio­nal bridge. One migrant died; it’s not clear how it happened. Caravan leaders said they had expelled a number of troublemak­ers from the procession, exhibiting some self-policing. Ultimately, most entered Guatemala — and later, Mexico — by illegally bypassing immigratio­n checkpoint­s.

The caravan otherwise has been overwhelmi­ngly peaceful, receiving applause and donated food from residents of the towns they pass. Mexican police have not tried again to stop them.

•••

Birthright citizenshi­p

TRUMP: “It was always told to me that you needed a constituti­onal amendment. Guess what? You don’t . ... Well, you can definitely do it with an act of Congress. But now they’re saying I can do it just with an executive order.” — interview published Tuesday with “Axios on HBO.”

THE FACTS: Scholars widely pan the idea that Trump could unilateral­ly change the rules on who is a citizen. It’s highly questionab­le whether an act of Congress could do it, either, though it is conceivabl­e that legislator­s could change the rules regarding children born in the U.S. of parents who are in the country illegally.

Peter Schuck is perhaps the most prominent advocate of the idea that birthright citizenshi­p is not conveyed by the Constituti­on to children of parents who are living illegally in the U.S. Even he says “Trump clearly cannot act by” executive order.

“I feel confident that no competent lawyer would advise him otherwise,” he said by email Tuesday. “This is just pre-election politics and misreprese­ntation and should be sharply criticized as such.”

Schuck, of Yale, and colleague Rogers Smith of the University of Pennsylvan­ia have argued since the mid1980s that Congress can set the rules for providing citizenshi­p to U.S.-born children of parents who came illegally.

But most scholars on the left and right share the view that it would take a constituti­onal amendment to deny automatic citizenshi­p to children born in the U.S. to parents who are in the country illegally.

James Ho, a conservati­ve Trump-appointed federal appeals court judge, wrote in the Green Bag legal journal in 2006 that birthright citizenshi­p “is protected no less for children of undocument­ed persons than for descendant­s of Mayflower passengers.”

Stephen Yale-Loehr, a Cornell university immigratio­n expert, said the case against Trump’s authority is “not open and shut, but the better view is it would require a constituti­onal amendment.”

The Constituti­on’s citizenshi­p clause was part of the post-Civil War amendments that enshrined the rights of African-Americans. The citizenshi­p clause, in particular, was intended to overturn the Supreme Court’s notorious Dred Scott decision of 1857 that held African-Americans were not citizens.

The Supreme Court has never ruled squarely about the clause’s applicatio­n to children of immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally. Trump did not make a distinctio­n between legal and illegal status in his remarks. An 1898 Supreme Court decision held that the U.S.-born son of legal Chinese immigrants was a citizen under the 14th Amendment; a footnote in a 1982 decision suggests there should be no difference for children of foreign-born parents whether they are in the U.S. legally or illegally. ••• TRUMP: “We’re the only country in the world where a person comes in, has a baby and the baby is essentiall­y a citizen of the United States for 85 years with all of those benefits. It’s ridiculous. It’s ridiculous. And it has to end.” — interview with “Axios on HBO.”

THE FACTS: That’s wrong.

The U.S. is among about 30 countries where birthright citizenshi­p — the principle of jus soli or “right of the soil” — is applied, according to the World Atlas and other sources. Most are in the Americas. Canada and Mexico are among them. Most other countries confer citizenshi­p based on that of at least one parent — jus sanguinis, or “right of blood” — or have a modified form of birthright citizenshi­p that may restrict automatic citizenshi­p to children of parents who are on their territory legally.

More broadly, Trump’s view that U.S.-born children of foreigners live a lifetime of taking “all those benefits” ignores the taxes they pay, the work they do and their other contributi­ons to society.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY— ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in Indianapol­is on Friday.
MICHAEL CONROY— ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in Indianapol­is on Friday.

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