Santa Fe New Mexican

White House power players at odds over immigratio­n

Advisers have conflictin­g ideas on how to position Trump for re-election push

- By Jill Colvin and Zeke Miller Associated Press

WASHINGTON — As President Donald Trump rails against an influx of migrants at the border, two of his most influentia­l White House advisers are at odds over the future of his immigratio­n policy.

Fresh off orchestrat­ing a shake-up at the Department of Homeland Security, an ascendant Stephen Miller is making a renewed push to impose tougher policies

at the border. That’s setting up a faceoff with senior adviser and presidenti­al son-in-law Jared Kushner, who has been quietly working on his own immigratio­n

reform package for months.

Their divergent approaches to the president’s signature campaign issue speak to more than the ideologica­l gulf between the two men: They echo a longstandi­ng philosophi­cal divide within the West Wing over how to best position the president ahead of his reelection campaign.

Miller, the mastermind of the president’s Muslim travel ban and other hard-line immigratio­n policies, has long been the combative ideologue, urging Trump to take ever-more-drastic action to staunch the border flow. Kushner, whose faith in his own careful deal-making power rivals Miller’s zeal, has spent months meeting with lawmakers and interests groups, trying to put together a package of legal immigratio­n and border

security changes that Republican­s can rally around heading into the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The resulting parallel tracks — one bent on implementi­ng ever-stricter policies and another meant to forge a more palatable and unifying legislativ­e package — have created uncertaint­y and confusion both inside the administra­tion and on Capitol Hill about where Trump is headed.

The conflict came into focus during a recent White House meeting when Trump effectivel­y knighted Miller, saying the aide would be in charge of immigratio­n going forward. But Kushner had already been tasked by the president with coming up with a legal immigratio­n plan, which Trump was briefed on this week.

“We’ll talk to you about it soon,” Trump said Wednesday of Kushner’s plan, labeling it “very exciting, very important for the country.”

Despite the aides’ differing approaches, administra­tion officials insist there is no personal ill will between Kushner and Miller, who have worked together over the years at the White House and on Trump’s campaign. The two are among the last remaining members of Trump’s tightknit 2016 team to still work at the White House, and have been longtime collaborat­ors, co-writing speeches, including the president’s convention address.

But for all of that, the two hold fundamenta­lly different views on immigratio­n and notions on how Trump ought to govern.

Miller, the unrelentin­g hard-liner, sees illegal and legal immigratio­n as existentia­l threats to national security and the American worker, and views Trump as a generation­al voice willing to make dramatic changes. Kushner, a former Democratic-leaning real estate developer, sees a broken immigratio­n system as another intractabl­e Washington problem that could be solved with the right deal.

That leaves them working at cross purposes at times.

After Trump threatened to shut down the southern border two weeks ago, Kushner was among those whom Homeland Security officials worked with to get the president to back off. Indeed, Kushner is seen within the department as someone who accepts the realities of legal limitation­s and can be trusted to calm Trump down, not spin him up, as they feel Miller tends to do on immigratio­n, according to three administra­tion officials with knowledge of the dynamic. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal deliberati­ons.

Senior administra­tion officials have tried to paint Miller and Kushner’s efforts as complement­ary — Miller addressing the day-to-day crisis at the border while Kushner looking at longerterm solutions.

“President Trump alone sets immigratio­n policy that’s designed to solve the humanitari­an crisis at our border, prevent illegal entry into our country and protect the American people — there’s no daylight between the president’s team as they work to implement that agenda,” spokesman Hogan Gidley said in a statement.

Trump on Wednesday also challenged the notion that anyone was running his immigratio­n policy other than him.

Asked by reporters whether he had considered tapping Miller to lead Homeland Security, Trump said: “Stephen is an excellent guy. He’s wonderful person.” But, he added, “Frankly, there’s only one person that’s running it. You know who that is? It’s me.”

But former officials said the absence of clear lines of authority and the recent purge of senior leadership at Homeland Security could create confusion, leaving the agency to implement whichever viewpoint wins the day.

“To whom are we listening? Who’s setting the priorities?” said David Lapan, the department’s former press secretary.

Thad Bingel a former senior Homeland Security official, who helped shepherd outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen through her confirmati­on process, echoed those concerns, saying that when it’s not clear who’s in charge at the White House, department­s and subagencie­s “spin their wheels a lot trying to satisfy multiple masters.”

Raising the stakes further is that Kushner is no mere White House aide — he’s the president’s son-in-law and has proven capable of forcing staff turnover at the highest level. He was instrument­al in the departure of two chiefs of staff and the president’s former chief strategist.

Kushner’s latest efforts on immigratio­n date to early January, when Trump asked him to pursue a deal with lawmakers that would win the president more money for his border wall during the government shutdown.

While White House officials caution that the plan has yet to be finalized, aides said it would include “merit based” changes to the legal immigratio­n system as well as proposals on border security that could include modernizin­g ports of entry and changing the way the country detains and removes people who enter the country illegally.

As part of that effort, Kushner has convened a series of informal listening sessions with almost 50 groups, including anti-immigratio­n advocates, business and conservati­ve groups coming together to talk through ideas. It was the same playbook he used last year on criminal justice reform, which culminated in the only major piece of bipartisan legislatio­n the president has signed.

During those meetings, Kushner was been careful not to tip his hat on his personal views. But participan­ts say they expect the plan to include significan­t changes, including increases in employment-based green cards. While protection­s for the hundreds of thousands of so-called Dreamers brought to the country illegally as children were a major point of discussion, a senior administra­tion official said Dreamers are not currently part of the plan.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS ?? White House senior adviser Stephen Miller, left, and presidenti­al son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner have divergent ideas on how best to position President Donald Trump on immigratio­n ahead of his re-election campaign.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS White House senior adviser Stephen Miller, left, and presidenti­al son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner have divergent ideas on how best to position President Donald Trump on immigratio­n ahead of his re-election campaign.

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