Donald Trump threatens to immediately deport 3000000 immigrants
Ryan told CNN that deportation is not what Donald Trump is focusing on.
But it’s not too off from the amount of people President Obama has deported.
Criminal immigrants: As of 2012, the government estimated that 1.9 million immigrants were convicted criminals and could face deportation.
They “covered” everything from longtime Russian President Vladimir Putin to who Trump might hire for Cabinet positions.
In an interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes,” Trump said, “There’s just so much to be done”.
“That’s only because they don’t know me”, Trump said.
Federal law says that Trump must be paid as president so he has to be paid a dollar a year.
“After the border is secure and after everything gets normalized, we’re going to make a determination on the people that they’re talking about who are terrific people”, Trump stated.
Approximately 11 million people are in the country illegally, according to the Pew Research Center.
Federal enforcement steadily intensified beginning under President Bill Clinton, following restrictive legislation he signed in 1996.
“As far as the salary is concerned, I wont take even $1”, he. He said he stills plans to clean up the system eventually, but that he needs to work with them at first.
Like his surrogates, the President-elect also brushed aside questions about the tens of thousands of people who have protested his win in cities across the country. Before that, Democrats criticized former President George W. Bush for his vacation time during his tenure. Stahl then pushed back and said his supporters were “harassing Latinos, Muslims”, and asked whether he had anything to say to them. “Nobody knows about it”. And we’re not going to have, like, a two-day period and we’re not going to have a two-year period where there’s nothing. How do you think Trump’s election will affect you or undocumented immigrants where you live?
So is the hyperbolic Trump guaranteed to be a more aggressive and ruthless Deporter-in-Chief than Barack Obama?
He made clear, though, in excerpts of Sunday’s interview that he still meant to crack down on undocumented immigrants in the country, focusing on people with criminal records.
According to United States government estimates, there are 1.9 million “removeable criminal aliens”, or non-US citizens who have committed crimes and are eligible for deportation, in the country.
Reports of physical and verbal harassment have come in, too.