Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump: Not looking to reinstate family separation policy

- By Colleen Long and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — Facing bipartisan pushback to his immigratio­n shake-up, President Donald Trump said Tuesday he’s not looking to revive the much-criticized practice of separating migrant children from their families at the southern border. At the same time, he suggested the policy had worked to deter migrants from coming into the U.S., although he offered no evidence to support his position.

Last summer the administra­tion separated more than 2,500 children from their families before internatio­nal outrage forced Trump to halt the practice and a judge ordered them reunited.

“We’re not looking to do that,” Trump told reporters before meeting with Egypt’s president at the White House. But he also noted: “Once you don’t have it, that’s why you see many more people coming. They’re coming like it’s a picnic, because let’s go to Disneyland.”

The potential reinstatem­ent of one of the most divisive practices of Trump’s tenure was just one aspect of the upheaval at the Department of Homeland Security this week that culminated with the resignatio­n of Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen. Acting Deputy Secretary Claire Grady, a 28-year civil servant, technicall­y next in line for secretary, was forced to resign Tuesday to make room for Trump’s pick to replace Nielsen, according to two people familiar with the decision.

With talk that more top officials were likely to be ousted, Republican­s expressed public and private concerns about the shake-up orchestrat­ed by the White House and cautioned that leadership changes wouldn’t necessaril­y solve the problem.

As for the separation of children, Trump declared that he was “the one that stopped it” and said his predecesso­r, President Barack Obama, was the one who had divided family members. Administra­tions are allowed to separate children under certain circumstan­ces including for the health and welfare of the child and due to a parent’s criminal history. This is why children were separated under the Obama administra­tion.

At hearings across Capitol Hill, lawmakers grilled administra­tion officials on whether the practice would resurface despite last year’s outrage and evidence that separation­s were likely to cause lasting psychologi­cal effects on the children. House Oversight Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., also said his committee would take a look at the staff shake-up at Homeland Security, although he said he had not decided on calling in Nielsen.

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said there was a serious problem going on between the White House and Homeland Security.

“If everybody’s sitting around waiting for a shiny new wonder pony to ride in and solve it, we’re going to be waiting a long time,” he said.

People familiar with the immigratio­n discussion­s within the administra­tion said family separation was one of several ideas Trump had revived in recent weeks as he and his aides try to tackle the problem of an ever-growing number of Central American families crossing into the U.S. The people were not authorized to speak publicly and spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

A senior administra­tion official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity Tuesday said the president had made a series of leadership changes at Homeland Security due to frustratio­ns that department officials weren’t fast enough at implementi­ng changes, such as a new regulation that would challenge a longstandi­ng agreement limiting how long children can be detained, that could spark a legal fight that would land in the Supreme Court.

The White House also was weighing a tougher standard to evaluate initial asylum claims, proposing a “binary choice” that would force migrant families to choose between remaining with their children in detention until their immigratio­n cases were decided or sending their children to government shelters while the parents remained in detention.

The administra­tion also is considerin­g clamping down on remittance payments that Mexican nationals send to their families, the official said.

Amid the pushback, Trump told reporters he was not “cleaning house” at the agency despite a number of staff changes. He said his choice to be the department’s new acting director, Kevin McAleenan, would do a “fantastic job.”

But as Trump was speaking, the senior administra­tion official was making a case to reporters about why the president felt changes were necessary. He described the agency as a large and unwieldly civilian bureaucrac­y in need of leadership that can deal with career officials resistant to the president’s agenda, including many responsibl­e for implementi­ng some of the very policies Trump seeks to roll back.

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