AP
By: Erica Werner
January 8, 2016
Congressional
Democrats confronted White House officials on Thursday over
holiday-season raids seeking Central American immigrants for
deportation, accusing the administration
of spreading terror through immigrant communities.
Rep.
Luis Gutierrez of Illinois said that President Barack Obama risks all
the goodwill he has built up over the last year through his executive
actions sparing millions
from deportation, actions now tied up in court. And he complained that
the administration did not alert congressional allies before conducting
the raids, with first became public when The Washington Post published a
story about the plans just before Christmas.
Gutierrez
and other lawmakers raised those complaints and others during a meeting
with administration officials, including Cecilia Munoz, director of the
Domestic Policy
Council.
“In the Hispanic Caucus there’s a real sense of outrage,” Gutierrez said.
Gutierrez
said he pointed out to Munoz that GOP presidential candidate Donald
Trump, running on an anti-immigrant platform, has praised the raids —
and taken credit for
them.
“Look,
what I said to her is, I said, ‘Think about it a moment. Donald Trump
is praising your public policy on immigration. You should need no
further evidence of how
wrong it is,’” Gutierrez said.
Separately,
at a news conference in Las Vegas, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid,
D-Nev., said that he’d contacted the Homeland Security Department “to
have them just
back off till we can find out a better way to do this.”
A
White House spokesman, Peter Boogaard, declined to comment beyond a
statement Monday issued by Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson. In
that statement, Johnson said
that 121 people with final orders of removal, who had exhausted their
legal claims and remedies, had been targeted for removal.
“This
should come as no surprise. I have said publicly for months that
individuals who constitute enforcement priorities, including families
and unaccompanied children,
will be removed,” Johnson said.
Public agencies upgrade speed, agility and security.
Despite
the small numbers involved Democrats say the publicity around the
holiday-season raids has reverberated throughout immigrant communities.
And several of the immigrants
have subsequently gotten their removals put on hold, prompting
Democrats including Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California to argue
that they need more lawyers and more help.
“We
need to obey our laws. But we also want to, in obeying our laws, make
sure that the process is fair to people,” Pelosi said Thursday.
The Center for American Progress, traditionally a close administration ally, also released a statement criticizing the raids.
The
planned deportations come as administration officials worry about
another surge of Central American women, children and families at the
southern border as people flee
violence and persecution in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. A
similar situation consumed the attention of Congress and the
administration in the summer of 2014, though Congress never acted on an
emergency budget request and policy changes sought by the
administration. The crisis subsequently receded from public view as the
number of arrivals dropped, but they are back on the rise.
Democrats said administration officials pointed to that increase in justifying the raids.
“This
was an announcement to send a message to Central America: Don’t come
here,” said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif. “But if your mother, your father
and your brother have
just been murdered, the message is not going to do it and that is the
problem.”
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