Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump disputes aide’s claim border wall was ‘uninformed’

- By John Wagner, Josh Dawsey and Philip Rucker

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday publicly pushed back against a characteri­zation by White House chief of staff John Kelly that his views on a southern border wall had “evolved” and privately fumed about the episode.

“The Wall is the Wall, it has never changed or evolved from the first day I conceived of it,” the president said in a morning tweet. “Parts will be, of necessity, see through and it was never intended to be built in areas where there is natural protection such as mountains, wastelands or tough rivers or water.”

Trump’s comments on Twitter came a day after Kelly told Democratic lawmakers that some of the hard-line immigratio­n policies Trump advocated during the campaign were “uninformed,” that the United States will never construct a wall along its entire southern border and that Mexico will never pay for it, according to people familiar with the meeting.

Later Wednesday, Kelly confirmed his comments to Democratic lawmakers during a television interview but attempted to play down any difference­s with the president while describing him as a willing negotiator as a government shutdown looms.

“He has evolved in the way he looks at things,” Kelly told Fox News. “Campaign to governing are two different things, and this president has been very flexible in terms of what’s in the realm of the possible.”

Trump associates said the president was furious with Kelly both for what he said and for the tone he used, which Trump thought made it appear he was a child who had to be President Donald Trump pushed back against comments made by chief of staff John Kelly about the border wall. managed.

One Trump associate who spoke to the president Wednesday night said Trump thought Kelly’s comments made him look bad and that he was giving in to Democrats.

The president, this person said, particular­ly disliked that the word “uninformed” appeared in news reports and has chafed for weeks at the characteri­zation of him as not intelligen­t and flighty in the best-selling book about his presidency by author Michael Wolff.

The person, who requested anonymity to speak more candidly, said it was neverthele­ss “a positive sign for Kelly that he didn’t mention the chief of staff’s name explicitly in the tweet. There seems to be no effort afoot though to make any change in the chief of staff position, this person said.

Christophe­r Ruddy, a Trump friend and president of the conservati­ve media outlet Newsmax, agreed with that assessment.

“Trump’s the type of guy who will dress you down if he doesn’t like what you say, but it’s got to be a whole long list of things before he takes action against somebody,” Ruddy said

In another tweet Thursday morning, Trump continued to insist Mexico would pay for the wall.

Meanwhile, Haitian community leaders and immigrant activists say that thousands of Haitian immigrants in the U.S. legally will face employment and travel hurdles because Trump’s administra­tion delayed the process of reregister­ing those with temporary protected status.

U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services released details Thursday about the next steps for the 60,000 Haitians with the special status. But the informatio­n comes too late to help the thousands whose immigratio­n documentss­how their legal and work status expiring Monday, said immigrants and advocates, some of whom wondered — in light of the president’s recent vulgar remarks about Haiti — if the bureaucrat­ic slowdown was deliberate.

The Trump administra­tion announced in November that Haitians under the temporary status would have until July 2019 to return home.

Also, dozens of former U.S. ambassador­s to African countries have written to Trump expressing “deep concern” over his comments about the continent and warning that respectful engagement is crucial to protecting U.S. interests.

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