If you were looking for a big softening on immigration from Donald Trump Wednesday night, you didn't get it.
Yes, Trump stopped short of addressing what would happen to
every last illegal immigrant in the United States. He even downplayed
the significance of the frequently cited 11 million figure, saying the
real number of illegal immigrants could be anywhere from 3 million to 30
million.
The Republican presidential nominee, fresh from a controversial but largely successful
trip to Mexico, emphasized his respect for the neighboring country's
president, the Mexican people and Americans of Mexican ancestry. He
argued that his immigration policies would be good for Latino Americans,
as well as African Americans. He conceded that many illegal immigrants
were good people, more clearly than in his campaign announcement speech
that b
ecame known for the "Mexican rapists" line.
But there was little else in Trump's rhetoric and even less in
the substance of his ten-point plan during this highly anticipated
speech that sought to moderate or dilute his tough message on
immigration.
Trump pledged to continue making the removal of criminal aliens —
that is, the subset of illegal immigrants who are being processed for
committing other crimes — the top enforcement priority. "Day one, my
first hour in office, they are gone," he said.
Remove the ambitious deadline and it is consistent with Barack
Obama and Hillary Clinton's position that criminal aliens must go.
Except Trump listed examples of offenders who have not been deported or
who have gone on to commit other heinous crimes, such as the Kate
Steinle murder. And he would not just seek the removal of illegal alien
convicts but "all illegal immigrants who are arrested for any crime
whatsoever."
That includes many people who would not be enforcement priorities under the Obama administration presently.
"According to federal data, there are at least 2 million
criminal aliens now inside the country," Trump declared. "We will begin
moving them out day one, in joint operations with local, state and
federal law enforcement."
"Beyond the 2 million, there are a vast number of additional
criminal illegal immigrants who have fled or evaded justice," he
continued. "But their days on the run will soon be over. They go out,
and they go out fast."
The GOP White House hopeful also pledged to reinstate programs
designed to identify and remove illegal immigrants currently housed in
local jails. These initiatives were helpful to the Obama administration
when it was seeking higher deportation figures earlier in his time in office.
He also endorsed legislation named after people killed by
illegal immigrants, such as Steinle and law enforcement officers Michael
Davis and Danny Oliver, intended to facilitate the deportation of
people with criminal records, gang affiliations or terror ties.
Trump vowed to deport illegal immigrants who become a public
charge, a number that could be significant despite some bans on taxpayer
monies to the undocumented based on welfare participation rates of immigrant households.
After some of Trump's campaign staffers and surrogates had
signaled ICE was the only "deportation force" he would need, the
businessman did in fact call for the creation of a "special Deportation
Task Force" inside the immigration enforcement agency. In an unscripted
aside, he joked about it looking into deporting Hillary Clinton.
Trump opposed special path to citizenship or legal status for current illegal immigrants. He did not even advocate the "touchback amnesty"
he'd previously hinted at and that his running mate Mike Pence proposed
while a member of Congress. Trump said illegal immigrants could leave
and apply to re-enter the country — but only through the existing legal
immigration process, subject to the annual caps on the number of visas.
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