Trump refuses to rule out new migrant family separations, but allies are
wary
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[November 27, 2023]
By Ted Hesson and Nathan Layne
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Donald Trump has vowed to intensify his crackdown
on immigration if he returns to the White House and has left the door
open to resuming his most controversial policy - family separations at
the U.S.-Mexico border - but key allies who could join a new Trump
administration as immigration enforcers are wary.
Five former Trump officials and conservative allies told Reuters that
even as Trump weighs harsher anti-migrant measures, they are concerned
about implementing a new version of the 2018 "zero tolerance" policy
that separated thousands of children from their parents at the southwest
border.
They said they worry about a repeat of the widespread public backlash
provoked by the original policy.
"The family separation that resulted from the zero tolerance caused an
uproar in the country," said Tom Homan, a former Trump immigration
official who could join a second administration. "The best way to do it,
rather than deal with all that chaos that comes with it, is to keep them
in a residential center together and have their hearings together."
Trump is the leading candidate for the Republican Party's 2024
presidential nomination and has made border security a major theme of
his campaign. He is vowing to restore the hardline policies from his
2017-2021 presidency, and implement new ones that clamp down further on
both legal and illegal immigration.
Trump touted the efficacy of family separations during a CNN town hall
in May, and declined to rule out reinstating them. He defended them
again in an interview with Spanish-language television channel Univision
that aired on Nov. 9.
"It stopped people from coming by the hundreds of thousands because when
they hear 'family separation,' they say, 'Well, we better not go.' And
they didn't go," he said.
Trump's hardline position has been seized upon by Democratic President
Joe Biden's re-election campaign, which says it is an example of the
"extreme" policies the Republican would pursue if he returned to the
White House.
Civil rights activists are alarmed by Trump's comments and are ready to
return to court to fight any new version of the policy, they told
Reuters.
The Trump campaign did not respond to requests for comment.
'LOT OF WAYS TO DO THIS'
How to handle the thousands of families crossing the southwest border
illegally has bedeviled successive Republican and Democratic
administrations. Biden has struggled with record numbers of migrants
crossing the border illegally since he took office, including a recent
rise in families.
The Trump administration launched its "zero tolerance" policy in April
2018 as a way to discourage illegal border crossings, including by
families. Under the policy, parents were charged with immigration crimes
and sent to jails while children were placed in shelters.
Trump ended it in June 2018 amid the backlash and instead said he would
seek to detain families together. But family detention remains limited
to 20 days under a 2015 court order, typically not enough time to
process family asylum claims and potentially deport them.
With some opinion polling showing battleground state voters favoring
Trump over Biden on immigration issues, Biden's campaign is reminding
them about Trump's separation policy, which was unpopular among most
Americans, including some Republicans.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald
Trump serves meals to Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS)
troopers at the South Texas International airport in Edinburg,
Texas, U.S. November 19, 2023 Michael Gonzalez/Pool via REUTERS/File
Photo
"Trump has been unapologetically open about the extreme, inhumane,
and fundamentally un-American policies that he would enact," Biden
campaign manager Julie Rodriguez said on a Nov. 18 press call before
a Trump border visit.
Among the Trump actions that Rodriguez highlighted was family
separation, calling it a "cruel policy of ripping babies from their
mothers' and fathers' arms."
Homan said he was not sure what he would do if Trump asked him to
revive family separation.
"I would suggest there are a lot of ways to do this," he said. "I'd
have to cross that bridge when we get to it."
Homan added that it would need "more safeguards in place to make
sure these families get reunited quickly."
Chad Wolf, Trump's former acting homeland chief and current
executive director of the America First Policy Institute, a
Trump-aligned think tank, said "all options need to be on the table"
when asked about revisiting family separations.
But Wolf said the U.S. public clearly did not support it and that
other actions could achieve the same goal.
ACTIVISTS READY LEGAL FIGHT
If Trump did implement a family separation policy, he would likely
face legal challenges. Days after he ended "zero tolerance" in 2018,
a federal judge ordered the administration to reunite the families
in response to a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU). The effort is still ongoing due to lack of
record-keeping.
Another hurdle for Trump could be a settlement agreement signed by
the Biden administration that would bar similar separations for
eight years.
ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt said the group would go to court to
enforce the prohibition if separations resumed.
"We take very seriously the recent talk about it still being on the
table and will be prepared if it happens again," he said.
Mark Morgan, a top border official under Trump, said he does not
believe a new Trump administration would implement a family
separation policy in the way it did the first time.
Morgan - like Homan, Wolf and others - cited Trump's 2019 "remain in
Mexico" policy as a better option. That program forced certain
non-Mexican migrants to wait in Mexico for the resolution of their
U.S. cases and coincided with a drop in border apprehensions,
including of families.
Biden moved to end "remain in Mexico" but Trump has pledged to bring
it back if reelected.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington and Nathan Layne in Wilton,
Connecticut; Additional reporting by Gram Slattery in Washington;
Editing by Ross Colvin and Daniel Wallis)
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