President-elect Donald Trump is expected to sign hundreds of executive orders soon after taking office as the 47th president. As laid out in the Washington Examiner's report, President Trump's 10 planned executive orders are specifically focused on the border. report The document was circulated by the Trump-Vance transition team on Monday.
All of President Trump's proposed border security orders could help rectify the crisis exacerbated and, in some ways, created by the Biden administration in recent years, but one order in particular could have particularly significant consequences. There is sex.
trump who Apparently An unnamed incoming Trump administration official told reporters in a phone call Monday morning, waiting at a signing desk on a stage in the Rotunda, that there are plans to abolish birthright citizenship.
In doing so, Trump would fulfill his May 2023 promise. said“As part of my plan to secure our borders, on the first day of my new term, under the correct interpretation of the law, future children of illegal immigrants will now automatically receive U.S. citizenship.” You cannot.”
“Tomorrow at noon, four years of American decline will end.”
President Trump said, “My policies will thwart the strong incentives that allow illegal immigration to continue, prevent further immigration, and encourage the return of many of the aliens Joe Biden brought into our country illegally.'' Dew,” he added.
President Trump, who apparently had the executive draft ready midway through his first term, said in a corresponding release that his executive office would clarify the meaning of the 14th Amendment. He emphasized that American citizenship applies only to “individuals born in the United States and subject to the Constitution.” Jurisdiction of the United States.”
In addition to citizenship, undocumented anchor babies would also be denied passports, Social Security numbers, and certain taxpayer-funded benefits.
at his place victory rally “Tomorrow at noon, four years of American decline will end, and we will begin a brand new day of American strength, prosperity, dignity and pride,” President Trump said Sunday at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C. said.
“If President Trump attempts to take away birthright citizenship through executive order, many nonprofit organizations will be prepared to sue.”
“We are going to stop the invasion of our borders,” President Trump said, adding, “The border security measures I will outline in my inaugural address tomorrow are the most aggressive efforts the world has ever seen to restore our borders.” It will be a thorough effort,” he added.
The examiners suggested President Trump would take nine other border-related executive actions:
- Declaring a national emergency on the border, allowing the Pentagon to send military personnel to the border and erect a barrier.
- Requires the military to “prioritize national borders and territorial integrity in strategic planning of operations and protect the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security of the United States by repelling forms of aggression, including illegal mass migration, drug trafficking, and human smuggling and human trafficking.” and other criminal acts,” the incoming Trump official pointed out.
- End catch-and-release, build a border wall, and reinstate the successful “Remain in Mexico” policy.
- Suspend, at least temporarily, resettlement of refugees.
- Start expelling illegal immigrants from the country all at once.
- According to one incoming Trump administration official, the direct agency will “report to the president on recommendations to suspend entry for nationals of countries of particular concern.”
- Designating cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
- Reversing the Biden administration's disastrous open borders policy. and
- Reinstate the death penalty for illegal aliens who kill law enforcement officers or commit other capital crimes.
President Trump may be able to accomplish a number of executive actions, but his repeal of birthright citizenship will almost certainly face legal challenges.
“Many nonprofits would be prepared to sue if President Trump tried to take away birthright citizenship through an executive order,” said Northeastern University legal scholar Dan Ehrman. said School news page for December. “He may try, but he will probably lose in court. This is probably his argument – he wants to take this matter to court – but he will probably lose.”
“This will start a legal battle. The order will be stayed, the case will eventually reach SCOTUS, and SCOTUS will ultimately rule on what 'subject to jurisdiction' means.” said Director Mark Krikorian. the study, I wrote in response to news that such a president is on the agenda during Trump's first term.
The Fourteenth Amendment grants citizenship to individuals “born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.” the hill noticed Since an 1898 Supreme Court case involving the children of a Chinese couple, the Fourteenth Amendment has long been held to mean that anyone born in a country qualifies as a citizen, regardless of the immigration status of their parents. It has been interpreted for a while.
Historian Victor Davis Hanson noticed Earlier this month, he said, “The 14th Amendment doesn't actually say anything. [is] The argument is that if you are born in the United States, you automatically become a citizen. This is written if you were born in the United States and are not subject to the laws of another country. Everyone who comes here is in some sense subject to the laws of another country. ”
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