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As Donald Trump prepares immigration speech, mass deportation at issue
“It’s just puzzling”, said Lanhee Chen, who has served as a policy adviser to several Republican presidential candidates.
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Former New York mayor and Trump adviser Rudy Giuliani told NJ Advance Media last week that even more Christie-inspired changes to Trump’s immigration stance will be forthcoming, such as a plan to track immigrant visas like Fedex packages, and using the E-Verify system to reduce illegal labor.
Trump says Huma Abedin “is making a very wise decision” and that “she will be far better off without him”.
Last week, he suggested he was softening his stance and would not necessarily deport the country’s estimated 11 million undocumented aliens, as he had vowed.
That was heresy among Republican primary voters and, as a result, with Trump, who lambasted Bush.
It’s been the driving issue of Donald Trump’s campaign.
And even if he tries to soften his words during the homestretch of the campaign, he can’t undo the damage that he has caused with his old words-the ones he used to call Mexicans rapists, drug dealers and criminals. Is Donald Trump saying that if someone has come into this country illegally – so they broke the law, but they’ve broken no laws since then, been in the country for 10 years, 20 years, without breaking any other laws – is he still going deport them, or is he going to let them stay?
“It’s absolutely building the wall, and here’s why: That is the piece that people feel has not been done, that we’ve fallen down on the job in this country both left, right and center … in terms of securing the border”, Conway said on the Fox News Radio show “Kilmeade & Friends”. “We all know you can’t pick them up and ship them across, back across the border”.
“On Day One, I am going to begin swiftly removing criminal illegal immigrants from this country – including removing the hundreds of thousands of criminal illegal immigrants that have been released into USA communities under the Obama-Clinton administration”, Trump told supporters in Des Moines, Iowa. “You don’t get friendlier”, Trump added.
The issue has been a cornerstone of his campaign since Trump officially announced his run for the presidency in June 2015.
Another Trump surrogate, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie also hit the airwaves to discuss Trump’s immigration plans and assure Americans that “we’re not going to have amnesty”.
The speech by Trump comes as recent comments by the real estate tycoon have raised some concerns among immigration hardliners.
“I’ve had very strong people come up to me, really great, great people come up to me, and they’ve said, ‘Mr”.
“He is not talking about a deportation force, but he is talking about being fair and humane”, Ms Conway said on CBS’ Face The Nation.
In a Fox News town hall taped August 23 in Austin, Sean Hannity asked Trump if he would change any part of the law to “accommodate those people that contribute to society, have been law-abiding, have kids here”.
“A porous border is an open invitation to those who wish to harm America, and for too long our borders have been an inviting access point for drug smugglers, human traffickers and potential terrorists”, Franks’ statement said.
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He did say that the deportation would be done “humanely”, but that’s not much of a reassurance that a mass deportation of 11 million people would be a good idea. “We’re going to see what happens”.