The Arizona Republic

TRUMP THREATENS SHUTDOWN

- EVAN VUCCI/AP

During a meeting Tuesday about border security, President Donald Trump said he would “love to see a shutdown” if Democrats don’t agree to his ideas for dealing with immigratio­n.

President Donald Trump said he’s willing to see another government shutdown if Democrats don’t agree to his immigratio­n framework, including funding for a U.S.-Mexico border wall and limits on family-based immigratio­n.

“I’d love to see a shutdown if we don’t get this stuff taken care of,” Trump said Tuesday. “We have to strengthen our borders not by a little bit, but by a lot. We are so far behind the tide.”

Trump made the comments during a White House roundtable discussion with law enforcemen­t and elected officials about the MS-13 gang. Trump has cited the gang as evidence that immigratio­n poses a danger to the nation.

Homeland Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and Acting Assistant Attorney General John Cronan argued that Congress needs to close loopholes that allow MS-13 gang members to exploit immigratio­n policies to enter the country legally and illegally.

“When we talk about MS-13 we have two or three main loopholes,” Nielsen said. “The first is we have an admissibil­ity problem, meaning that when they come to our border I have to let them in, I can’t keep them out just by virtue of them being in a gang. Once we catch them and detain them I cannot remove them by virtue of them being in a gang.”

The meeting included five Republican legislator­s, including Rep. Martha McSally, an Arizona Republican who is running for the U.S. Senate. McSally said that border agents had told her gangs like MS-13 and cartels are exploiting loopholes, and even coaching unaccompan­ied minors and migrants arriving at the border.

“They turn themselves in and then they make false asylum claims because the cartels told them exactly what to say,” she said. “If they are an unaccompan­ied minor from Mexico or Canada, they are then released quickly into the interior of the United States and we can’t do anything about it. Most of them don’t show up for their future court dates.”

This assertion is disputed by groups that work with unaccompan­ied minors and asylum seekers. Trump is falsely portraying the U.S. asylum system as a dangerous risk for purely political gains, they said.

“Those who turn to this country for protection from persecutio­n are often the vulnerable individual­s who are fleeing gang violence in their own country,” said Jennifer Quigley with Human Rights First, a nonpartisa­n advocacy group.

“Asylum seekers go through a long, complex process filled with safeguards against fraud before they are finally able to rebuild their lives in safety,” she added. “By peddling the misleading narrative that asylum seekers are gang members and loopholes, the president threatens the lives of thousands of desperate individual­s and betrays our country’s greatest strength.”

During the discussion, Trump jabbed at current immigratio­n laws saying that “not another country in world has the stupidity of laws that we do when it comes to immigratio­n.” He also repeatedly attacked Democrats, accusing them of endangerin­g the country.

“If we have to shut it down because the Democrats don’t want safety ... we’ll go with another shutdown,” Trump said.

However, one of the five Republican legislator­s participat­ing in the discussion told Trump that a shutdown wasn’t necessary because cracking down on gangs was an issue both parties agree on.

“We don’t need a government shutdown on this,” Virginia Rep. Barbara Comstock said. “I think both sides learned that a shutdown is bad.”

The threats of a shutdown stem from negotiatio­ns over the fate of “dreamers” — the undocument­ed migrants brought to the U.S. as children.

The White House has issued three demands related to immigratio­n in exchange for its support of a path to citizenshi­p for 1.8 million dreamers, including 800,000 protected from deportatio­n under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA. Trump wants $25 billion for border security, an end to the diversity visa lottery program, and a reduction in family-based immigratio­n.

After forcing a partial shutdown over DACA, Democrats voted to extend government funding until this week, in exchange for promises to debate protection­s for dreamers in Congress.

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