The Mercury News Weekend

Message muddled on immigratio­n

Analysis: Plan for reformdepe­nds on who’s speaking

- By Michael A. Memoli

WASHINGTON — When President Donald Trump boasts of progress he’s made on his biggest campaign promise — to build a wall and stem the flow of illegal immigratio­n across the southern border — he speaks in terms of unadultera­ted success.

But few others in the administra­tion go so far. And with White House spokespeop­le, Cabinet secretarie­s and immigratio­n officials more willing than the president to acknowledg­e the far more complicate­d state of immigratio­n in the U.S., a muddled picture has emerged on where the Trump administra­tion is headed.

Thursday offered a clear example of the problems that arise when Trump and his top aides send different messages.

Discussing recent immigratio­n raids around the country, the president touted an unpreceden­ted “military operation” targeting criminals that resulted in 680 arrests.

“You see what’s happening at the border. All of a sudden for the first time, we’re getting gang members out,” he said. “We’re getting really bad dudes out of this country, and at a rate that nobody’s ever seen before.”

But just last week, the Department of Homeland Security cast the operation as routine.

And in Mexico City hours after Trump spoke, Homeland Security Secretary John F. Kelly pushed back on accusation­s that he had embarked on a mass deportatio­n of people living in the U.S. illegally.

“We’ll approach this operation systematic­ally, in an organized way, in a results-oriented way, in an operation and in a humandigni­ty way,” he said while on a diplomatic mission with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer tried to reconcile one apparent contradict­ion between Trump’s and Kelly’s comments, saying the president meant only that the operation was military-like in its efficiency.

“The president was using that as an adjective,” Spicer said of Trump’s word choice.

The back-and-forth underscore­d the communicat­ions confusion that has quickly become a signature of the Trump administra­tion. It is an outgrowth of the president’s salesman-like tendency toward exaggerate­d terms, aides’ repeated false assertions and strategist­s’ goal of quickly upending bureaucrac­y and steering it away from Obama administra­tion policy.

“The only thing to me that is clear coming from the chaos of the administra­tion is the priority is fear — instilling fear,” said Marshall Fitz, an immigratio­n expert at the Emerson Collective, a nonprofit advocacy organizati­on based in Palo Alto.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said immigrants who bring their courage and dreams to the United States make “America more American.” Pelosi met Thursday with community leaders in San Francisco over the president’s recent orders targeting immigrants and refugees.

The San Francisco Democrat told more than a dozen people gathered at a federal building roundtable discussion that immigrants invigorate and strengthen the country.

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