Chicago reaffirms immigrant 'sanctuary'
status after Trump's win
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[November 15, 2016]
By Renita D. Young
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Mayor Rahm Emanuel on
Monday reaffirmed Chicago's status as a haven for immigrants fearing
deportation for entering the United States illegally, a day after
President-elect Donald Trump vowed to expel as many as 3 million
immigrants who he said have criminal records.
Emanuel's words of reassurance to undocumented immigrants in the
country's third-largest municipality followed similar pledges last week
from the mayors of New York and Los Angeles to maintain their
designations as "sanctuary cities."
“You are safe in Chicago. You are secure in Chicago. And you are
supported in Chicago," Emanuel said at a news conference at Ann & Robert
H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. "This is a city of inclusion."
The sanctuaries movement has been embraced in nearly 40 U.S. cities
where local police have made it a policy to refrain from checking the
immigration status of individuals under arrest and sharing that
information with federal authorities who could act to deport them.
The movement came to greater national attention under the Democratic
administration of President Barack Obama who was criticized by
Republicans for tolerating sanctuaries even as his administration moved
to step up deportations of immigrants with criminal records.
It has taken on a new sense of urgency after Trump, a Republican,
promised during his campaign to expand deportations and to withhold
federal funds from cities that shield people in the country illegally.
In a nationally televised interview Sunday, Trump said he would
immediately deport or incarcerate 2 million to 3 million illegal
immigrants who he said are convicted criminals, street gang members or
drug dealers. By comparison, roughly 2 million people have been deported
during Obama's eight years in office.
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Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel delivers a speech in Chicago, Illinois,
U.S., September 22, 2016. REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo
Emanuel, a former White House chief of staff under Obama, said
undocumented immigrants in Chicago would also continue to have access to
public services, including education and city-funded healthcare.
He was joined by civic and business leaders who support the sanctuary
movement and two state lawmakers spearheading a bill to allow
undocumented students to apply for financial aid at public four-year
colleges if they meet certain requirements.
The City Council is soon expected to approve Emanuel’s plan for a
municipal identification card that would benefit undocumented
immigrants, the homeless and others who find it difficult to obtain a
government ID.
Lurie Children's Hospital chief Patrick Magoon said Trump's immigration
stance was causing tremendous anxiety, citing data showing calls to
suicide prevention and crisis hotlines statewide have doubled since
Trump was elected.
(Editing by Steve Gorman and Andrew Hay)
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