Business Standard

President-elect shows every sign of sweeping immigratio­n clampdown

- SAHIL KAPUR 11 November

Donald Trump won the presidency campaignin­g on a promise of a far-reaching immigratio­n crackdown, and early indication­s are that he intends to execute it.

The immigratio­n section of Trump’s presidenti­al transition website reaffirms his plans to “cancel unconstitu­tional executive orders”—which his advisers have said includes President Barack Obama’s 2012 program that has protected from deportatio­n 750,000 young people brought to the US illegally.

Once he takes office in January, Trump can end that program without any approval from Congress. He can also end Obama’s 2014 executive action, currently blocked by the courts, to extend that deportatio­n reprieve to some 4 million undocument­ed immigrants who haven’t committed crimes.

The website reemphasis­ed other Trump proposals for which he may need congressio­nal approval, including plans to build a wall on the US-Mexico border, suspend new visas from certain high-risk countries, end funding for sanctuary cities, and change legal immigratio­n policies to better serve US workers. The president-elect listed immigratio­n as one of his top three priorities on Thursday. “We’re looking very strongly at immigratio­n,” he told reporters in the Capitol after meeting with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. “We’re going to look at the borders, very importantl­y, we’re looking very strongly at health care and we’re looking at jobs—big league jobs.” Trump tapped Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, an anti-immigratio­n firebrand who helped draft controvers­ial restrictio­nist laws in Arizona and Alabama, to his transition team. “I’m a member of the immigratio­n policy transition team and there’s going to be a lot to do there in part because Trump and Obama are diametric opposites when it comes to immigratio­n policy,” Kobach told Kansas television station.

Kobach promised that there will be “a lot of changes.”

In addition, Trump has been relying on Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama, another immigratio­n restrictio­nist, for advice on immigratio­n policy. Immigratio­n was a flashpoint in the 2016 race, with Trump ousting Republican rivals like Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio by campaignin­g on a far more restrictiv­e platform than they initially supported. Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton wanted to expand Obama’s immigratio­n relief plans and grant a path to citizenshi­p for people in the U.S. illegally.

“He’ll spend a lot of time controllin­g the border. He may not spend very much time trying to get Mexico to pay for it. But it was a great campaign device,” Newt Gingrich, a Trump surrogate and former House speaker, told .

The presidente­lect listed immigratio­n as one of his top three priorities on Thursday

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