Trump 'amnesty' hint angers right and fails to draw Democrat

Donald Trump makes remarks as he hosts a
naturalization ceremony in the Oval Office on Saturday.
Donald Trump makes remarks as he hosts a
naturalization ceremony in the Oval Office on Saturday. Photograph:
REX/Shutterstock
Donald Trump
raised the possibility of one day granting amnesty to migrants living in the US
illegally, after Democrats rejected his latest plan to fund a wall along the
southern border and reopen the US government.
In a remark
that angered Republicans while not being taken seriously by Democrats, Trump
suggested legal status could be given to millions of undocumented people as part
of a future grand bargain on American immigration law.
The
president floated the idea in a tweet on Sunday that stressed he was, for now,
only offering to extend legal protections for some refugees and people who were
brought to the US illegally as children.
“Amnesty will be used only on a much bigger
deal, whether on immigration or something else,” Trump said. He also said there
would “no big push” to deport those already living in the US without
permission.
The US is
more than four weeks into its longest government shutdown, which was triggered
by Trump’s refusal to sign a bipartisan congressional spending plan that did
not give him the billions of dollars he wants for a wall along the border with
Mexico.
Trump’s
emphatic promise to “build the wall” won him the support of many conservative
voters during the 2016 presidential campaign. He claimed he would force Mexico
to pay for the wall directly, but has recently effectively conceded this will
not happen.
And by the way, clean up the streets in San
Francisco, they are disgusting!
On Saturday,
Trump said from the White House that he would agree to limited concessions for
some undocumented immigrants if Democrats agreed to give him more than $5bn in
public funds for the wall.
Trump’s
offer would comprise a three-year extension in legal protection for roughly
700,000 “dreamers”, were brought to the US illegally as children, and
approximately 300,000 refugees facing an end to temporary legal status.
The latest
major Trump resignations and firings
The proposal
was dismissed by senior Democrats even before Trump began speaking. Democrats
are demanding that Trump reopen the government by signing the existing
congressional spending plan before any further negotiations on immigration.
Nancy
Pelosi, the Democratic speaker of the House of Representatives, described
Trump’s plan as a “compilation of several previously rejected initiatives” that
would not provide lasting security for dreamers and other groups.
“What is
original in the president’s proposal is not good,” she said. “What is good in
the proposal is not original.”
Republicans
in the Senate will nonetheless take up Trump’s proposals next week. The
Oklahoma senator James Lankford told ABC’s This Week the offer was “a
reasonable compromise” and said: “The vote this week is not to pass the bill.
It’s to open up and say, ‘Can we debate this? Can we amend it? Can we make
changes?’”
Democrats
are unlikely to join in. On Saturday Chuck Schumer, the minority leader in the
Senate, accused Trump of “more hostage taking” as 800,000 federal government
workers and hundreds of thousands of contractors continued to either work
without pay or endure unpaid time off work.
On Sunday,
Schumer said he did not think the president's measures would pass the Senate.
He also said he would push legislation to shield government workers from
eviction or home foreclosure, repossession of cars and penalties for late
payment of bills and student loans.
Trump, meanwhile,
insulted Pelosi and derided the cleanliness of the California city that she
represents in Congress. He wrote in a tweet: “And by the way, clean up the
streets in San Francisco, they are disgusting!”
The
president’s proposal also met hostile reactions among many on the Republican
right, highlighting a political dilemma that Trump, who claims to be a master
dealmaker, has created for himself.
Some
conservatives dismissed the offer as being akin to an amnesty itself. Ann
Coulter, the far-right author, said in a tweet: “Trump proposes amnesty. We
voted for Trump and got Jeb!”
The former
Florida governor Jeb Bush, who was perceived as soft on immigration by the
Republican right, was one of several candidates Trump defeated in the party’s
2016 presidential primary contest.
“It’s not
amnesty,” he told Fox News on Sunday. “There’s no permanent status here at all,
which is what amnesty contemplates.”
Trump has
threatened to unilaterally declare an emergency to secure funding for the wall
if the Democratic-controlled House refuses to approve his plans. Legal analysts
have warned that such a drastic move would likely be halted by the courts.
Senator Mark
Warner of Virginia, a Democrat, said on Sunday that the chaotic shutdown would
only be repeated on future policy disputes if his party caved to Trump’s
demands on wall funding before a reopening of the government.
“If the
president can arbitrarily shut down the government now, he will do it time and
again,” Warner told NBC’s Meet The Press. He and other Democrats have proposed
passing separate legislation to ensure the out-of-pocket government workers are
paid.
Several
opinion polls have indicated that a majority of Americans oppose Trump’s plan
to build a border wall and that more people blame Trump for the ongoing
shutdown than blame Democrats in Congress.
An average
of polls compiled by RealClearPolitics currently states that 55.3% of Americans
disapprove of Trump’s performance, the highest figure since last March. A
little over 41% of people approve.