The Mercury News

Trump plans to slash US refugee admissions

- By Josh Lederman and Matthew Lee The Associated Press

The Trump administra­tion will allow no more than 45,000 refugees into the United States next year, officials said Tuesday, in what would be the lowest admissions level in more than a decade.

President Donald Trump is expected to announce the cap on refugee admissions following a lengthy debate within his administra­tion about whether to go higher or lower. The figure represents the maximum number of refugees the U.S. would be willing to accept. The actual number of refugees who move to the United States could actually be much lower.

The administra­tion had been considerin­g a ceiling somewhere between 40,000, which the Homeland Security Department recommende­d, and 50,000, the State Department’s preferred level, according to officials. The new figure appears to be a compromise that Cabinet officials felt would be palatable to the president.

Still, Trump’s stated hostility to accepting refugees and opposition among others in his administra­tion mean the U.S. may not intend to fill all 45,000 slots in the 2018 fiscal year that starts Sunday. The U.S. hasn’t taken in so few refugees in a single year since 2006, when 41,223 were allowed entry.

All of the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal deliberati­ons. They said no decision was final until formally announced by the president. The State Department declined to comment on potential figures ahead of a presidenti­al announceme­nt.

Trump has until Sunday to determine how many refugees to admit. The U.S. welcomed 84,995 in fiscal year 2016, and former President Barack Obama had wanted to raise that number to 110,000 in 2017.

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