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Trump retreats from vow to deport all living in U.S. illegally
“Anyone who has entered the United States illegally is subject to deportation”, Trump said in a highly anticipated speech hours after his surprise meeting with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto.
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“We did discuss the wall”.
These quotas, which Trump did not discuss, “ignore realities and lie at the root of our broken immigration system”, Johnson’s statement said.
The two men met privately in Mexico City on Wednesday afternoon.
Trump made a brief trip to Mexico City to meet with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto on Wednesday before he delivered a fiery speech promising to send criminal illegal immigrants home that evening in Phoenix.
He was measured and soft-spoken, nearly deferential as he read carefully off prepared notes.
Trump is claiming that 13,000 people in the USA illegally who were ordered back to their home counties remained in the US between 2008 and 2012, and committed more crimes, including killings, sexual assaults and “some of the most heinous crimes imaginable”. – Donald Trump, the Republican candidate for the White House, presented his immigration plan that includes the construction of an “impenetrable” wall along the country’s border with Mexico, a “deportation task force” to expel undocumented immigrants with criminal records, and rescinding President Barack Obama’s amnesty policy.
Trump is emphasizing illegal immigrants accused of crimes, an issue of far less controversy than what to do with the millions of immigrants in the US illegally who have not been accused of crimes. And he vowed that no person living in the United States illegally could chart a path to legal status without first leaving the country.
“Our message to the world will be this: you can not obtain legal status or become a citizen of the United States by illegally entering our country”, he said.
Even for Trump – who has made an art of straddling both sides of an issue and playing to the preferences of the audience he’s standing before – the political whiplash was astounding.
To be sure, Trump’s daylong foray across the border and back was a bold gamble, reflecting his urgent need to shake up his race against Democrat Hillary Clinton.
The hastily announced visit to Mexico seemed meant to remind voters of Trump’s brash, play-by-my-own-rules approach to politics.
Trump launched his campaign with a speech that accused Mexico of sending its rapists and criminals across the border.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump says he will order the immediate detention of all known immigrants in the USA illegally who have been arrested for crimes.
With Conway seeming to be ascendant, one could easily imagine the day ending with a very different speech in Phoenix.
The Trump campaign didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the hat.
There had been several implications that Trump might have been going soft on his earlier views on immigration.
Trump raged against what he called President Barack Obama and Clinton’s “open borders” policy, accusing the Democrats of caring more about immigrants living in the US illegally than American citizens.
He says on the first day in office he will “issue detainers for illegal immigrants who are arrested” and initiate immediate proceedings to remove them.
The ad buy comes weeks after Clinton’s campaign chose to expand their political and organizing operations into Arizona, telling state Democratic leaders that they planned to invest six figures in a ground operation in the state.
None of the Trump surrogates appearing across the media landscape Wednesday night seemed to dispute this, saying rather that the Wednesday meeting had “not been a negotiation” and that more formal talks would ensue on the wall and its financing.
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And in a show of confidence, Clinton’s campaign announced early Thursday morning that it planned to run its first television advertisements in Arizona, a state with a large Hispanic population that has been at the center of the nation’s immigration debate.