President Trump signed three more executive orders on Monday, including one aimed at local jurisdictions that the administration says they are not cooperating with its aggressive repression of immigration.
An order orders to Pam Bondi, the Attorney General, and Kristi Nem, the Secretary of National Security, to publish a list of state and local jurisdictions that the Trump administration considers “sanctuary cities”, which means that they are limited to ingenuity with the holy. The ingenuity of engineers. WitDALALALALALALIAED WITDALALALED WITDALADED WITDALALALALALED that requires pursuing “all the necessary legal resources and legal measures” against the jurisdictions that continue to oppose the repression of immigration of the administration.
A second order instructs the Trump administration to provide legal resources to accused or mistreated police officers; Review and try to modify existing restrictions on the application of the law, such as federal consent decrees; Provide military equipment to the Local Police; and use application measures against local officials that “illegalize that the agents of the law prohibit the agents of the law from performing tasks.”
Early in the day, Karoline Leavitt, the White House Press Secretary, said the order “unleashed the United States police to persecute criminals.”
A third executive order seeks to enforce existing rules that require professional truck drivers to be competent in English. The order requires that the transport department place any driver who cannot speak and read the English “out of service”.
“The mastery of English,” says the order of Mr. Trump, “should be a non -negotiable security requirement for professional drivers.”
One of the orders could also stop documented immigrants to obtain enrollment in the state for higher education. He directed federal agencies to stop the application of state and local laws “that provide the enrollment of higher education in the State to aliens but not to US citizens outside the State.”
The orders that represent the last save of Mr. Trump against the so -called Sanctuary cities. As the president tries the rhythm of deportations, his administration has been frustrated more and more because some jurisdictions will not keep migrants in jail beyond their release to facilitate federal officials.
Trump’s immigration repression has caused a significant protest.
“Let’s be clear: Trump continues to position his anti-immigrant agenda at the center of his action,” said Héctor Sánchez Barba, president of my family votes, a pro-immigration defense organization. “Trump’s inhuman attacks in immigrants who respect the law and who row taxes are morally disgusting and deeply unpopular with the US people. We know this because in just four months he has reached historical levels. Low levels of low levels of low levels of low levels of low levels of low levels of low levels of unpopulary.” “” “” “” “” “” “” “”
The Trump administration has already seduced the city of Rochester, New York, accusing officials there to illegally prevent the application of the immigration law. And the Department of Justice is processing a Milwaukee judge for charges of obstructing immigration agents.
The mayor of Rochester, Malik D. Evans, and the president of the City Council, Miguel Meléndez, issued a joint statement on Friday criticizing the lawsuit.
“At first glance, the complaint is a political theater exercise, not legal practice,” said the statement, added: “The city of Rochester undertakes to invest its resources in public safety for all, not to do the work of application of immigration of the federal government.”
Meanwhile, a federal judge in San Francisco temporarily blocked the Government to enforce part of an executive order that orders agencies that retain cities and counties funds that do not cooperate the application of Witerral immigration.
“It’s quite simple,” Leavitt said Monday. “Obey the law, respect the law and not obstruct federal immigration officials and officials responsible for enforcing the law when they are simply trying to eliminate public security threats from the communities of our nation.”
The executive orders were signed one day before Trump celebrated on the 100th day of his second term. The White House has scheduled a week of promotion of events so far, beginning with its repression of immigration.
The White House grass aligned on Monday morning with posters of documented migrants of cup, style T.
In his first term, Mr. Trump attacked the so-called Sanctuary cities by threatening to retain federal funds of mayors and governors who did not comply with his anti-immigration agenda. The administration has increased the pressure on jurisdictions only three months in Mr. Trump’s second mandate, using bellicose language to describe tension with democratic leaders.
Stephen Miller, deputy director of the White House personnel, said that the Democratic Governors and Mayors were moving a “war” against the Federal Police.
“They do not recognize the supremacy of the Federal Police to protect the lives and living of US citizens against a foreign nation,” said Miller.
Miller said those cities led by Democrat were allowing “illegal foreigners to be released, violate and kill.”
Even before Trump signed the new executive orders on Monday, the National Security Department said he was reviewing billions of dollars in subsidies for cities and states to ensure that the recipients complied with Mr. Trump’s priorities on the application of immigration and other national policies.
For Immigration Advisors of Mr. Trump, the policies of the city of Sanctuary are one of the main obstacles on their way to fulfill Trump’s campaign promise to register the greatest amount of deportations in the history of the United States. The “sanctuary jurisdiction” label is widely applied to cities and counties that prevent their local prisons from cooperating with federal immigration officials.
The Federal Immigration and Customs application, or ICE, prefers to collect undocumented immigrants from local prisons, instead of their homes, workplaces or in public. To do so, you need collaboration of local officials, such as the County Sheriffs. In some cities and counties, this collaboration is completely blocked or severely limited.
At a morning press conference, Tom Homan, the Trump administration border tsar, said the administration had held 139,000 deportations. That figure is left behind the last year’s rhythm of the Biden Administration, which seemed to bother Mr. Homan.
He said the number would be high but, because the border crossings had fallen so significantly, there were people returning.
“Am I happy with that? The numbers are good,” he said, adding: “I read the media,” Oh, ice deportations are behind the Biden administration. “Well, why?
Homan said that the Administration, until Tuesday, would begin to enforce their plan to make the unwilling immigrants of 14 years register and provide their digital footprints to the United States government or potentially face criminal prosecution.