FILE PHOTO: People in Mexico wave at U.S. Border Patrol agents on horseback patrolling the U.S.-Mexico border fence near San Diego, California, U.S., November 10, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
President Donald Trump on Wednesday
signed directives to build a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico and crack
down on U.S. cities that shield illegal immigrants, proceeding quickly on
sweeping and divisive plans to curb immigration and boost national security.
The Republican president is also
expected to take steps in the coming days to limit legal immigration, including
executive orders restricting refugees and blocking the issuing of visas to
people from several Muslim-majority Middle Eastern and North African countries
including Syria, Sudan, Somalia, Iraq, Iran, Libya and Yemen.
Trump signed two executive orders at
the Department of Homeland Security, one ordering construction of a wall along
the roughly 2,000-mile (3,200-kilometer) U.S.-Mexico border and the other
moving to strip federal grant money from "sanctuary" states and
cities, often governed by Democrats, that harbor illegal immigrants.
In cities such as San Francisco local
officials, often Democrats, refuse to cooperate with federal authorities on
actions against illegal immigrants.
"The American people are no
longer going to have to be forced to subsidize this disregard for our
laws," White House spokesman Sean Spicer said.
In an interview with ABC News on
Wednesday, Trump said construction on the wall would start within months, with
planning starting immediately, and that Mexico would pay back to the United
States "100 percent" of the costs. Mexican officials have said they
will not pay for the wall.
During a White House briefing, Spicer
referred to the wall as "a large physical barrier on the southern
border."
"Building this barrier is more
than just a campaign promise, it's a common sense first step to really securing
our porous border," Spicer added. "This will stem the flow of drugs,
crime, illegal immigration into the United States," he said.
Trump has long said that he will make
Mexico pay for the wall.
"We'll be reimbursed at a later
date from whatever transaction we make from Mexico," Trump told ABC on
Wednesday. "I'm just telling you there will be a payment. It will be in a
form, perhaps a complicated form. What I'm doing is good for the United States.
It's also going to be good for Mexico. We want to have a very stable, very
solid Mexico."
His plans prompted an immediate
outcry from immigrant advocates who said Trump was jeopardizing the rights and
freedoms of millions of people.
'POLITICAL THEATER'
"The border wall is about
political theater at the expense of civil liberties," said Christian
Ramirez, director of the Southern Border Communities Coalition immigrant
advocacy group.
"It is not national security
policy. Border communities are among the safest in the nation and patrolling
them with tens of thousands of heavily armed, poorly trained, unaccountable
agents puts lives at risks. This will turn these communities into de facto
military zones," Ramirez said.
Trump made cracking down on illegal
immigration a key element of his presidential campaign, with supporters often
chanting "Build the wall," during his rallies.
The cost, nature and extent of the
wall remain unclear. Trump last year put the cost at "probably $8
billion," although other estimates are higher, and said the wall would
span 1,000 miles (1,600 km) because of the terrain of the border.
Many Democrats have opposed the plan
and could try to thwart any legislation to pay for the construction in the U.S.
Congress, although Republicans control both the Senate and House of
Representatives.
Spicer
said Trump's directives would also end the practice known by critics as
"catch and release" in which authorities apprehend illegal immigrants
on U.S. territory but do not immediately detain or deport them. He said they
would create more detention space for illegal immigrants along the southern
border to make it easier and cheaper to detain and deport them.
Trump's
actions could fundamentally change the American stance on immigration, as well
as further testing relations with Mexico.
Many
Americans view their country with pride as "a nation of immigrants,"
and President John Kennedy wrote a book with that title more than half a
century ago. But Trump successfully tapped into resentment toward the roughly
11 million illegal immigrants already in the United States and said during the
campaign he would deport them all.
Trump,
who in announcing his presidential bid in June 2015 accused Mexico of sending
rapists and criminals into the United States, has also threatened to slap hefty
taxes on companies that produce in Mexico for the U.S. market and to tear up
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) between the Mexico, Canada and
the United States.
Trump and
Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto are due to meet next week.
Asked about Trump's wall, Republican U.S. Senator John
McCain said a physical barrier is not enough to secure the border and called
for the additional use of observation towers, drones and other technology.
"Walls can be easily breached," McCain,
whose home state of Arizona borders Mexico, told MSNBC's "Morning
Joe" program.
(Reporting by Julia Edwards Ainsley; Additional reporting by
Mica Rosenberg, Doina Chiacu, Andy Sullivan and Susan Heavey; Writing by Will
Dunham; Editing by Frances Kerry and Alistair Bell)
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