Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump vows security, changes to asylum system

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump sent a message Thursday to Central Americans heading toward the Southwest border.

“These illegal caravans will not be allowed into the United States. And they should turn back now,” Trump warned during a speech at the White House.

“My administra­tion is finalizing a plan to end the rampant abuse of our asylum system,” Trump told reporters. When the plan is ready, migrants would have to “present themselves lawfully at a port of entry” to be considered for asylum. Those who cross the border “illegally” would not be eligible for asylum.

“Asylum is not a program for those living in

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poverty,” Trump added. “There are billions of people in the world living at the poverty level. The United States cannot possibly absorb them all. Asylum is a very special protection intended only for those fleeing government persecutio­n based on race, religion and other protected status.”

Trump’s comments drew a rebuke from ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project Director Omar Jadwat.

“President Trump did not announce an immigratio­n policy this afternoon but repeatedly lied about the asylum system, his family separation policy and his largely unfunded wall,” Jadwat said in a statement. “If he plans at some point to prohibit people from applying for asylum between the ports of entry, that plan is illegal.”

Trump said his administra­tion would end the practice of “catch and release” and house migrants in “massive cities of tents” until their legal cases are completed.

Under current protocol, many asylum seekers are released while their cases make their way through back-logged courts, a process that can take years.

“Eventually people won’t be coming here any more when they realize they can’t get through,” Trump said, adding that he would sign a comprehens­ive executive order next week.

There are four caravans making their way toward the United States. The main group of about 4,000 migrants — down from its estimated peak of more than 7,000 — remains in southern Mexico, mostly on foot and hundreds of miles from the border. A second group of 1,000 or so is more than 200 miles behind the first. A third band of about 500 from El Salvador has made it to Guatemala, and a fourth group of about 700 set out from the Salvadoran capital Wednesday.

In his remarks, Trump blamed the caravans on “Democrat-backed laws” that serve as a magnet for Central Americans who are not likely to qualify for asylum and on judicial rulings that he said have hampered immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Thursday’s announceme­nt was Trump’s latest attempt to keep the issue of immigratio­n front-and-center as he tries to drum up enthusiasm among his GOP base in the final stretch before Tuesday’s elections, which will determine whether the GOP keeps control of Congress.

But the announceme­nt did not quite live up to Trump’s own hype. On Wednesday, the president teased reporters with the suggestion that he would double or triple the number of U.S. troops being sent to the border, but he made no such announceme­nt.

After his remarks, Trump left for an evening political rally in Missouri, the latest in a daily series he has scheduled leading up to the midterm elections. Republican­s are fighting to keep Democrats from picking up 23 seats needed to control the House and to maintain their control of the Senate.

“What is clear from the timing and vague nature of today’s remarks is that he is simply trying to inflame his base in the final run-up to the midterms,” Jadwat said.

On Tuesday, Trump told “Axios on HBO” that he planned to sign an executive order to end automatic citizenshi­p for babies born in the United States to noncitizen­s.

On Wednesday, Trump retweeted a campaign video that featured Luis Bracamonte­s, a twice-deported immigrant with an extensive criminal history, now on California’s death row for killing two Northern California law enforcemen­t officers in 2014. “Democrats let him into our country,” the video said, and “Democrats let him stay.”

Politifact rated the video “pants on fire” false as “Democratic and Republican administra­tions deported Bracamonte­s but also failed to keep Bracamonte­s out of the United States. We found no evidence that he was proactivel­y allowed to stay.”

On Twitter, Democratic leaders tended to ignore Trump’s remarks as they have focused on health care, the issue they consider most likely to help their candidates.

“He’s really assumed full control of this midterm,” opined Republican political consultant Matt Mackowiak, and he’s “not letting these (GOP) candidates run their own races.”

If Trump were focused on changing birthright citizenshi­p, Mackowiak said, “You would roll it out in a far more advanced and cohesive way if it were a strategy. But it’s not a strategy, it’s a fly by the seat of the pants.”

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal. com or 202-662-7391. Follow @Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

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