The Mercury News

Trump still ‘likes’ idea of sanctuary city transfer

- By Laura King

President Donald Trump still “likes” the idea of transferri­ng immigrants in the U.S. illegally to so-called sanctuary cities like San Francisco, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Sunday.

But she portrayed the notion as a burden-sharing strategy that the Democrats should welcome rather than a plan intended to punish political adversarie­s like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DSan Francisco.

Senior Democrats pushed back on the idea, previously rejected by administra­tion lawyers in internal White House deliberati­ons, as probably illegal and emblematic of the administra­tion’s failure to conceive of a fair and coherent immigratio­n policy.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., who chairs the House Homeland Security committee, described the administra­tion’s policymaki­ng on immigratio­n as built around crises that Trump had created.

“This is again his manufactur­ed chaos that he’s created over the last two years on the border,” Thompson said on ABC’s “This Week.”

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, suggested senior White House aide Stephen Miller should be summoned to testify about deliberati­ons behind Trump’s overarchin­g immigratio­n strategy.

“Probably Steve Miller, who seems to be the boss of everybody on immigratio­n, ought to come before Congress and explain some of these policies,” Nadler said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

That comment may have been calculated to touch on a sensitive point: Trump has a wellknown aversion to ceding too much of the spotlight to underlings.

Trump last week made a point of saying that “there’s only one person running” immigratio­n policy, and “it’s me.”

Sanders, interviewe­d on ABC’s “This Week,” offered a variation on the administra­tion’s longstandi­ng contention that Democrats oppose any form of border security, saying it logically followed that they should embrace an influx of those detained during or after an attempted entry to the United States.

Democrats, she said, “have said they want these individual­s into their communitie­s, so let’s see if it works and everybody gets a win out of it.”

She also cited the need to “take away some of that burden on all of the communitie­s that are along the border.”

“The president likes the idea,” Sanders said of the sanctuary cities proposal. But she added that it was not an “ideal solution.”

Immigratio­n advocates argued that the idea, if implemente­d, would backfire on Trump because it would deliver immigrants here illegally to communitie­s that would refuse to turn them over to immigratio­n agents for deportatio­n. The immigrants then would be free to go anywhere in the country.

Kellyanne Conway, a senior counselor to Trump, said Congress was “unserious” about addressing border issues, including the enormous strains the arrival of thousands of Central American families have put on the immigratio­n system.

Conway said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that she had a message for would-be asylum seekers, particular­ly mothers with young children: “Don’t come.”

Trump, who publicly endorsed the sanctuary cities idea Friday, said Saturday on Twitter that his administra­tion had the “absolute legal right” to carry out such a transfer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States