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		Democratic Arizona governor says she'll work with Trump on border 
		security if it won't harm families
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		 [November 19, 2024]  
		By ANITA SNOW 
		PHOENIX (AP) — Democratic Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs said Monday she is 
		willing to work with President-elect Donald Trump’s new administration 
		on border security issues like stopping fentanyl trafficking, but not in 
		areas that she said could harm Arizona families such as mass 
		deportation.
 Hobbs traveled to the Arizona-Mexico border on Monday to trumpet her 
		state’s National Guard work helping crack down on smuggling of the 
		deadly synthetic opioid into the U.S. through Nogales, Arizona. More 
		than half of all border seizures of the drug are made in Nogales.
 
 “Border security was a core issue of the Trump campaign," Hobbs told 
		reporters as vehicles moved behind her. “I look forward to having 
		conversations with the incoming president about Arizona’s needs, 
		including border security and the work we’ve done here to build these 
		partnerships that are actually producing results and how we can continue 
		those partnerships under his administration.”
 
 But, she added, there are Arizona families who “are worried about 
		threats from the Trump administration as well.”
 
		
		 
		“I will not tolerate actions that harm Arizonans, that harm our 
		communities and quite honestly, divert resources from providing real 
		security at our border,” Hobbs said. 
		Trump has promised to conduct the largest deportation operation in 
		American history, something that would upend the lives of the 11 million 
		people living in the United States without authorization, many of whom 
		have family members who are U.S. citizens.
 “I will stand up to protect Arizonans from harm by the federal 
		government, from anyone," Hobbs said, but “I’m not going to comment on 
		hypotheticals. We don’t know what a mass deportation plan will look 
		like, what resources it will involve.”
 
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            Vehicles wait in line to enter the United States through the Dennis 
			DeConcini Port of Entry in downtown Nogales, Ariz., June 1, 2009. 
			(Mark Henle/The Arizona Republic via AP, File) 
            
			
			 
            Hobbs also touted Operation Secure, her initiative deploying the 
			National Guard to assist local and federal enforcement in Arizona's 
			border communities like Nogales. The governor said 170 Arizona 
			National Guard members are assigned to counterdrug efforts 
			statewide, including 40 at the border in Nogales.
 The governor's border visit comes less than two weeks after 
			Democrats suffered blistering losses at the polls in Arizona, with 
			Trump defeating Vice President Kamala Harris by a margin of about 
			185,000 votes statewide and beefing up the Republican majority in 
			the Arizona Legislature.
 
 Hobbs said Monday that border security is not a “Republican or 
			Democratic issue” and she will work with “anyone” to keep the border 
			safe.
 
 Troy Miller, acting head of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, also 
			spoke at the news conference and called National Guard members “a 
			critical force multiplier” for his agency's operations at the 
			Nogales port.
 
 “The scope of this problem is too large and the stakes are too high 
			for us to do this work alone,” Miller said. “That’s why I’m so proud 
			of the partnerships we have built, especially the ones right here in 
			Arizona.”
 
			
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