Texarkana Gazette

Sanctuary order involves little money, lawyer argues

- By Sudhin Thanawala

SAN FRANCISCO— President Donald Trump’s executive order withholdin­g funding from communitie­s that limit cooperatio­n with immigratio­n authoritie­s applies to a small pot of grant money, not the hundreds of millions of dollars that cities and counties around the country say is at stake, a lawyer with the Department of Justice said Friday.

Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad Readler made the comments during a court hearing on lawsuits filed by the city of San Francisco and Santa Clara County against Trump’s order targeting so-called sanctuary cities.

Readler said the order would affect less than a million dollars in funding for Santa Clara County and possibly no money for San Francisco.

The plaintiffs had argued that more than a billion dollars was at stake for each of them because the president’s order referred broadly to federal funding.

Readler’s statement appeared to catch U.S. District Judge William Orrick by surprise. Orrick then questioned the point of the president’s executive order.

Readler said the administra­tion was using a “bully pulpit” to highlight an issue it cares deeply about.

The Department of Justice also says in court documents that San Francisco’s lawsuit was premature because decisions about withholdin­g funds have yet to be made.

San Francisco and Santa Clara County have asked for a court order blocking the Trump administra­tion from cutting off funds to any sanctuary cities. Orrick did not immediatel­y issue a ruling.

The sanctuary city order was among a flurry of immigratio­n measures the president signed in January, including a ban on travelers from seven majority-Muslim countries and a directive calling for a wall along the Mexico border.

A federal appeals court blocked the travel ban. The administra­tion then revised it, and the new version is also stalled in court.

The sanctuary city order directs the attorney general and secretary of homeland security to ensure that local government­s that refuse to provide people’s immigratio­n status to federal authoritie­s are not eligible for federal grants except as deemed necessary for law enforcemen­t purposes.

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