Trump campaign ad on murder raises heat
in shutdown fight
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[January 22, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump's presidential campaign on Saturday issued a new
video ad calling Democrats "complicit" in murders committed by illegal
immigrants, during a government shutdown partly triggered by an impasse
over immigration.
The Trump campaign released the ad, titled "Complicit," on the
anniversary of the Republican president's inauguration.
It focuses on an undocumented immigrant, Luis Bracamontes, charged in
the 2014 killings of two police officers in Sacramento, California. The
man's lawyers had questioned his sanity but a judge found him mentally
competent to stand trial, according to a report last week in the
Sacramento Bee.
"Democrats who stand in our way will be complicit in every murder
committed by illegal immigrants," the ad says.
The new ad is likely to anger Democrats and immigration advocates and
could inflame tensions over the issue on Capitol Hill, where Democrats
and Republicans were working through the weekend to reach an agreement
that would reopen the government.
A news release announcing the ad blamed Senate Democratic Leader Chuck
Schumer for the shutdown, accusing him and Democrats of "holding lawful
citizens hostage over their demands for amnesty for illegal immigrants."
Schumer's spokesman said in an email, "This is a shameless attempt by
the president to distract from the Trump shutdown. Rather than
campaigning, he should do his job and negotiate a deal to open the
government address the needs of the American people."
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A traffic light shines red after President Donald Trump and the U.S.
Congress failed to reach a deal on funding for federal agencies in
Washington, U.S., January 20, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
"It's a campaign ad, which tend to be extreme, but this is completely
divorced from reality and full of fear and hate," said Melanie Nezer,
vice president of the refugee agency HIAS.
Trump filed for re-election the day he took office, an unusual move
that has allowed him to begin campaigning long before the November
2020 election. Historically, incumbent presidents have waited two
years, until after the midterm elections, to file formally.
On Friday, most Senate Democrats opposed a bill that would have
avoided the shutdown, because their efforts to include protections
for hundreds of thousands of mostly young immigrants, known as
Dreamers, were rejected by Trump and Republican leaders.
The Dreamers were brought illegally into the United States as
children, and given temporary legal status under a program started
by former President Barack Obama.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson and Doina Chiacu; Editing by Alistair
Bell)
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