Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump picks anti-immigratio­n activist to head refugees agency

- By Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has nominated a staunch anti-immigratio­n activist to head the State Department agency that oversees refugee and immigratio­n issues.

Ronald W. Mortensen, a former foreign service officer and longtime fellow at the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which advocates against legal and illegal immigratio­n, is Trump’s choice to be assistant secretary of State for the bureau of population, refugees and migration. The White House announced the nomination late Thursday.

As word spread on Friday, Democrats and immigratio­n advocates quickly objected. But Mortensen, who must be confirmed by the Republican-controlled Senate, could face trouble among Republican­s as well: His long trail of controvers­ial writings and statements includes attacks not only against immigrants but against some Republican senators, including Marco Rubio of Florida and John McCain of Arizona.

Mortensen, originally from Utah, in 2015 called Rubio “exceptiona­lly gullible or just plain dishonest” on immigratio­n issues. In 2014, he said McCain had made the U.S. vulnerable to infiltrati­on by the Islamic State terror group through his “dogged support for illegal aliens and open borders.”

In February 2017, just after Trump took office, Mortensen praised his efforts to step up deportatio­ns of immigrants in the country illegally and to ban some legal arrivals. He wrote in a blog post that Trump had succeeded in destroying “the myth of the noble, law abiding illegal alien.”

Until Trump was elected, Mortensen wrote, “the career politician­s that he replaced had consistent­ly put illegal aliens first and deliberate­ly ignored the terrible harm done to the American men, women, and children.”

The Washington-based Center for Immigratio­n Studies where he’s worked has been listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group, a designatio­n it rejects.

The State Department bureau that Mortensen would run is supposed to have a different aim. Its purpose is to “provide protection, ease suffering, and resolve the plight of persecuted and uprooted people around the world,” according to its mission statement.

One of Mortensen’s favorite targets lately, according to his blog posts, has been the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, an Obamaera permit system that temporaril­y protected from deportatio­n roughly 800,000 immigrants who came to the country illegally as children. Trump has ordered an end to the program, though federal courts have blocked him for now.

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