Toronto Star

Senator blasts Trump security official

Cabinet member claims under oath she ‘did not hear’ president’s vulgar comments

- YUEQI YANG, SAHIL KAPUR AND STEVEN T. DENNIS BLOOMBERG

WASHINGTON— Several Democrats challenged Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen on Tuesday on her statements that she couldn’t recall whether U.S. President Donald Trump used a vulgarity to refer to Haiti and African countries during a White House meeting on immigratio­n.

“You are under oath. You and others in the room suddenly cannot remember” what the president said during Thursday’s meeting in the Oval Office, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey said in an impassione­d speech during a Senate judiciary committee hearing. “Your silence and your amnesia is complicity.”

The president referred to Haiti, El Salvador and African countries during the meeting as “shithole countries” and said he preferred to receive immigrants from countries like Norway, according to Sen. Dick Durbin, who was at the meeting, and others who were briefed on it afterward.

The furor over the president’s reported remarks has hardened positions on both sides, as Democrats seek to attach legislatio­n shielding young immigrants from deportatio­n to a must-pass government spending bill to avert a shutdown at the end of this week. Republican leaders in Congress are angling for another short-term funding measure to keep the government open. Democrats say it’s Trump’s responsibi­lity to end the stalemate.

Trump has denied using the vulgar word, and Nielsen said repeatedly Tuesday that she didn’t hear the president say it.

“I did not hear that word used, no sir,” Nielsen said at the hearing. “The conversati­on was very impassione­d. I don’t dispute that the president was using tough language. Others in the room were also using tough language.”

In repeated questionin­g by Democrats on the judiciary panel, Nielsen said she didn’t hear Trump say any other version of the vulgar word, though she acknowledg­ed the president might have said it and she didn’t hear it. “Anything is possible,” Nielsen said.

Booker said he was “seething with anger” at Trump’s reported com- ments, saying that such statements “give licence to bigotry and hate in this country.”

At the meeting on Thursday, Durbin and Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina presented Trump a bipartisan proposal to protect undocument­ed immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, known as “dreamers.”

Graham said Tuesday he wanted to know what happened to change Trump’s mind from interest in the bipartisan compromise plan to heated opposition.

“This has turned into an s---show and we need to get back to working together,” Graham said.

“I don’t think the president was well served by his staff,” Graham told reporters later outside the hearing room.

“I think somebody on his staff gave him really bad advice between 10 o’clock to 12 o’clock on Thursday.”

Durbin told reporters outside the hearing room on Tuesday that Trump told him at 10 a.m. Thursday: “I can’t wait to hear what’s involved in it.” By the time of the meeting at noon, the senator said, someone on Trump’s staff had invited other members of Congress “who generally oppose all immigratio­n reform. The idea was clearly to outnumber us and to kill our efforts.”

Durbin said he suspected senior Trump adviser Stephen Miller, a White House hardliner on immigratio­n, had worked to tilt the meeting. “Any effort to kill immigratio­n reform usually has Mr. Miller’s fingerprin­ts on it, so I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if he’s a part of this,” Durbin said.

Trump decided in September to end Obama-era protection­s for the young immigrants, known as the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, on March 5.

The Justice Department said Tuesday it will go directly to the U.S. Supreme Court to appeal a San Francisco federal judge’s Jan. 9 ruling that blocked Trump’s decision to end the “dreamer” protection­s. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that “it defies both law and common sense” for a judge to issue a nationwide order. The Supreme Court rarely grants review without letting a federal appeals court consider an issue first. Graham made a promise to the young immigrants Tuesday, saying, “We’re not going to leave you behind. I don’t know how this movie ends, but you’re going to be taken care of.”

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey blasted Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen on Tuesday, saying “Your silence and your amnesia is complicity.”
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey blasted Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen on Tuesday, saying “Your silence and your amnesia is complicity.”

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