The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

President: No due process for the undocument­ed

Trump tweets that he wants those who ‘invade’ the U.S. deported immediatel­y.

- By Philip Rucker and David Weigel

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Sunday explicitly advocated depriving undocument­ed immigrants of their due-process rights, arguing that people who cross the border into the United States illegally must immediatel­y be deported without trial — and sowing more confusion among Republican­s ahead of a planned immigratio­n vote this week.

In a pair of tweets sent while being driven to his Virginia golf course, Trump described immigrants as invaders and wrote that U.S. immigratio­n laws are “a mockery” and must be changed to take away trial rights from undocument­ed migrants.

“We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country,” Trump wrote. “When somebody comes in, we must immediatel­y, with no Judges or Court Cases, bring them back from where they came. Our system is a mockery to good immigratio­n policy and Law and Order. Most children come without parents.”

The president continued in a second tweet, “Our Immigratio­n policy, laughed at all over the world, is very unfair to all of those people who have gone through the system legally and are waiting on line for years! Immigratio­n must be based on merit — we need people who will help to Make America Great Again!”

The latest presidenti­al exhortatio­ns came as House Republican­s were prepping for a vote on comprehens­ive immigratio­n legislatio­n, after a more hard-line bill failed last week. Neither bill has Democratic support, and prospects for the second one passing appeared dim, although the White House still supports it.

“I did talk to the White House yesterday. They say the president is still 100 percent behind us,” Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, a co-sponsor of the bill, said on “Fox News Sunday.”

Some Republican lawmakers are preparing a more narrow immigratio­n bill that would address one of the flaws in Trump’s executive order mandating that children and parents not be separated during their detention.

“I think, at minimum, we have to deal with family separation,” McCaul said.

The 1997 “Flores settlement” requires that migrant children be released from detention after 20 days, but the new GOP measure would allow for children and their parents to stay together in detention facilities past 20 days.

In the event that the broader immigratio­n bill fails to pass the House this week, the White House is preparing to throw its support behind the narrower Flores fix, which is expected to garner wider support among lawmakers, according to a White House official.

This behind-the-scenes legislativ­e work amounts to a reversal from Trump’s position on Friday, when he tweeted that “Republican­s should stop wasting their time on Immigratio­n until after we elect more Senators and Congressme­n/women in November.”

The tweet demoralize­d Republican­s as they headed home for the weekend but did not end talks about what the House might pass.

Marc Short, the White House director of legislativ­e affairs, said Sunday that it was premature to announce which measures Trump would sign but urged Congress to act quickly to address the immigratio­n issue broadly.

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