Immigration crackdown Despite defeats in court and deepening scandal, Trump�s crusade ramps
up on many fronts
With all the hoopla over the current administration�s relationship with Russia and the health care
Dumpster fire, we haven�t been paying as much attention to the Trump policy that seems
to be going great guns: the deportation and detention of foreign nationals by Immigration
and Customs Enforcement.
For all of President Trump�s failures on other matters, this one is succeeding briskly.
That is, if you define success as ICE striking terror in immigrant communities all over the
country.
On Monday Attorney General Jeff Sessions formally announced that the Trump administration is
implementing its plan to use federal funds to crack down on �sanctuary cities� and
states that choose to not comply with federal immigration laws.
The Justice Department believes that local officials should be required to determine
the immigration status of anyone they detain (or interact with), and if that person cannot
provide proof of citizenship, he or she should be turned over to ICE.
The plan calls for the federal government to withhold certain funds from any of the
200 different municipalities that have been designated as sanctuary cities.
Trump and Sessions are both hard-core demagogues on the issue of immigration, spreading fear
and paranoia that undocumented immigrants are dangerous people who have contributed
to a crime wave, despite lots of evidence to the contrary.
Local officials in most of these cities, including the police, understand that this actually
makes their jobs harder and their communities less safe, as many people will simply refuse
to report crimes or bear witness for fear of being turned over to federal agents.
Essentially, the federal government now has policies that threaten to turn America�s
cities into the frightening dystopias that Trump already says they are.
People, unsurprisingly, would prefer to have their communities prosperous and safe.
There will be legal challenges from the cities, and the plan to withhold federal funds depends
upon a number of factors that may or may not successfully come into play.
But that might not even be the point.
Trump and Sessions want to create a climate of suspicion and drive immigrants underground
or out of the country.
ICE is carrying out that mission with gusto.
The New York Times reported last month that new orders from the Trump administration have
granted ICE and the border patrol much more freedom to detain and deport people.
These officials apparently felt very restrained by the rules in force during the Obama administration,
which required them to focus their attention on undocumented immigrants with a record of
serious felonies.
Today they have the mandate to deport people even with minor infractions: As press secretary
Sean Spicer put it, agents have been told to �take the shackles off.� A spokesman
for ICE�s union told the Times that �morale amongst our agents and officers has increased
exponentially since the signing of the orders.� The Times further noted:
Two officials in Washington said that the shift � and the new enthusiasm that has
come with it � seems to have encouraged pro-Trump political comments and banter that
struck the officials as brazen or gung-ho, like remarks about their jobs becoming �fun.�
Those who take less of a hard line on unauthorized immigrants feel silenced, the officials said.
Part of the ICE officials� �fun� is being able to freely arrest bystanders, even
people without criminal records, which they call �collateral� arrests.
Stories abound of people being rousted from their homes, and even shot, by ICE agents.
People have committed suicide in detention centers.
Kids are watching their parents dragged away in handcuffs, and women are withdrawing domestic
abuse complaints for fear of being detained.
In Los Angeles reports of sexual assaults are down 25 percent from last year, which
authorities attribute to victims being afraid to come forward.
In Atlanta African immigrants are being rounded up for deportation at much higher rates than
in 2016.
Immigrant communities all over the country are already living in terror of federal agents.
If Sessions is able to end the practice of sanctuary cities, they�ll be living in fear
of local police as well.
That�s the point.
This describes the anti-immigration crusade against undocumented workers.
But there�s also the crusade against refugees and travelers from certain Muslim countries
that the Trump administration has deemed a threat.
The harassment of those travelers continues even as the ban wends its way through the
courts.
For instance, there�s the story about an Iranian woman making a family visit to Oregon
on an approved visa who was held for hours at the Portland airport before being transferred
by Customs and Border Protection agents to a county jail 80 miles away.
She was moved back to Portland 12 hours later and then put on a plane out of the country
without explanation, according to reports.
An ACLU lawyer representing the woman�s family told The Guardian he had no knowledge
that she had been charged with any crime.
Asylum seekers are also on the list.
A CNN report about a 16-year-old blogger from Singapore is instructive.
Amos Yee is a kid with a big mouth who ran afoul of Singapore�s anti-free speech laws
for his internet rants about religion and politics and was sent to jail twice.
On Friday an immigration judge granted Yee asylum in the U.S. because �his prosecution,
detention and general maltreatment at the hands of Singapore authorities constitute
persecution on account of Yee�s political opinions.� The Trump administration has
vigorously opposed the asylum claim and is likely to appeal the decision.
Singapore�s authoritarian society, where business concerns are predominant and dissent
is not tolerated in any form, may well be the model Donald Trump aspires to.
In the political big picture, Trump and his administration are in trouble.
They are inept, corrupt and mired in a very serious scandal.
The president�s approval ratings have already hit historic lows.
But the executive branch�s law enforcement agencies are carrying out his immigration
agenda as if all of the other stuff were taking place in another country.
In cities and towns across America, Donald Trump�s promise to �get �em out and
get �em out quickly� is being kept.
It�s important that people don�t fool themselves into believing that Trump is a
paper tiger who can�t do any serious harm.
He�s already doing it.
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