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Mexican Invasion Title: Trump Tweaks Border Stance in Bid to Shift Shutdown Blame (Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump “major announcement” on Saturday will include a proposal to extend protections for so-called Dreamers for three years, in exchange for $5.7 billion in funds for border security, said a person familiar with the proposal. As well as protections for Dreamers, young people brought to the U.S. illegally as children, the plan would also extend the visas for Temporary Protection Status holders, though it’s unclear for how long. Trump’s concessions, expected to be outlined in a speech at 4 p.m. on Saturday, are aimed at getting Democrats back to the negotiating table in a bid to end a partial government shutdown now into its fifth week. The proposals, similar to ones backed in the past by Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer and Dick Durbin of Illinois, the number two Senate Democrat, could be embraced by Democrats, though many want nothing short of citizenship for Dreamers and oppose a physical wall along the U.S.-Mexico border as an anti-immigrant symbol. Any embrace of Trump’s plan might therefore depend on how the measures are framed. Democratic lawmakers have said repeatedly that they’re in favor of stronger border security -- just not the concrete wall or steel fence that Trump has proposed. Acrimonious Standoff Trump and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi entered a long holiday weekend with no sign their acrimonious standoff was any closer to an end. But as the pain of the shutdown grows daily, the pressure is on to find a solution. Speaking to reporters on Saturday, Trump doubled down on his demand for a wall and Trump took a swipe at Pelosi as he prepared to board Marine One at the White House. “She’s being controlled by the radical left,” Trump said, adding that he hopes she’ll come around to see “everybody knows, that walls work.” The president also cited a new assemblage of migrants heading for the U.S. border as justification for a wall, and said he’s disappointed that “Mexico is not stopping them.” The comment echoed one made earlier on Twitter. Although Trump has hinted that he might declare a national emergency to bypass Congress and fund the wall if other options failed, he doesn’t plan to do so on Saturday, a person familiar with the president’s thinking said on Friday. The person wouldn’t discuss what Trump plans to offer to the Democrats who now control the U.S. House, beyond saying that it may have something to do with immigration. The Democrats, who have adamantly refused his demands for $5.7 billion for the wall, have called for protections for young immigrants who came to the U.S. as children and other immigration reforms. Personal Clash Trump’s tweet late Friday previewing the announcement capped three days of dramatic twists in a clash between the president and the speaker -- second in line to the presidency behind Vice President Mike Pence -- that’s become highly personal. The president blocked Pelosi and a congressional delegation from visiting U.S. troops Afghanistan over the weekend, a day after she said he should postpone his Jan. 29 State of the Union address. On Friday, Pelosi abandoned an attempt to fly there on commercial flights, saying that administration leaks about the trip endangered the lives of the participants. “It was very irresponsible on the part of the president,” Pelosi told reporters. In canceling the military flight, Trump said he wanted her to remain in Washington to negotiate. But as of Friday, Pelosi’s office had received no White House invitation for further talks, even as Trump moved on other fronts, including scheduling a second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the end of February. Lengthy Impasse The White House didn’t respond to a request for comment on the possibility of Pelosi being invited for meetings over the weekend. The dispute over the wall led to the impasse, which has closed nine government departments and dozens of agencies since Dec. 22. Democrats are trying to craft their own border security plan that doesn’t include new wall funding, though the White House didn’t indicate any softening of the president’s stance. “What really has to happen is Nancy Pelosi needs to come back to the White House or send others here who are actually willing to converse and negotiate and come up with the money for border security,” Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway said in an appearance on Fox Business Network. “Our doors are open.” In Ankara, Turkey, Republican Senator Lindsay Graham of South Carolina predicted that the stalemate could be resolved soon, citing “behind the scenes” meetings he’s had with Democrats and Vice President Michael Pence. “I believe there is a deal that can be reached fairly quickly,” Graham told Bloomberg Saturday after meetings with Turkish leaders. “I think this can be done in a couple of weeks, not a couple of months.” Democrats have rallied around the position that only after the government opens would they be willing to talk about increased border security. Republicans said Democrats would have to offer more than the $1.3 billion in border funds they’ve already put on the table. Pelosi said this week that her party is willing to talk about increased border security money but not to fulfill Trump’s campaign promise to build a 2,000 mile wall. “In case I wasn’t clear, 90 percent of the drugs coming into the country come through the ports of entry. Let’s use resources to expand the ports of entry,” she told reporters. “This has to be evidence-based, not notion-mongered.” By presenting their own proposal, Democrats can inoculate themselves against charges by Trump and his supporters that they’re in favor of open borders. Biden Weighs In “We’ve got to say what we’re for, not just what we’re against,” former Vice President Joe Biden, a potential challenger to Trump in 2020, said in an interview in Washington. Pelosi, House Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey of New York and Homeland Security subcommittee Chairwoman Lucille Roybal-Allard of California and their staffs are seeking to draft the plan by Tuesday. “A lot of members are asking what is our plan here,” Roybal-Allard said. “We are looking at all the options.” Roybal-Allard said that she’d be looking at adding personnel, technology, and infrastructure at the border as well as securing ports of entry and funding more immigration judges to process backlogs of immigration cases. Humanitarian aid for asylum-seekers and aid for Central American countries to encourage migrants to remain at home are also on the table, as is facilitating trade between the U.S. and Mexico. Separately, Democrats are adding border provisions to a package of six bills funding other parts of the government and set for a vote next week. Totaling about $1 billion, half the money would be used to strengthen security at ports of entry and half to fund more immigration judges. Developing a House plan could ease the concern of moderate Democrats that the party is not doing enough to try to resolve the impasse. --With assistance from Jennifer Jacobs, Alyza Sebenius, Tamara Thueringer and Laura Curtis.
The 2nd GOP amnesty. Is there any doubt that this will become permanent, they're never leaving?
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#1. To: hondo68 (#0)
Sounds good to me. Get the money, build the Wall. The Dreamers have always been a special case, and should be treated as such. I hope Trump proposes this. I doubt Pelosi will take it. If she gives on the Wall and the money, Trump wins a huge victory. Those of us who support Trump want that Wall. You are not a Trump supporter, Hondo. YOU oppose him no matter what. So YOU are going to scream that he surrendered, etc., if he makes this deal and gets the money for the Wall. But as for me, a Trump supporter since the beginning, I will see that we have won the main battle: the Wall. I recall all the way back to the campaign Trump said the Dreamers were a special case and spoke of them with compassion. YOU may not have the compassion he and I do, but you were never with us in the first place. If Trump makes this deal, he will have the strong support of those of us who supported him. And you NeverTrumpers will find something to carp about no matter what. You may as well be Democrats.
Regular illegal alien invaders. The law requires that they be deported, not given amnesty.
The reality is that the bulk of them are simply never going to leave, regardless of who is president or what the laws are or might be in the future. And it's actually kind of like gun control. The only dreamers that would accept deportation are the ones that are otherwise law abiding people. The drug & human smugglers & criminals will make themselves the hardest to find. Dreamers are not a problem that Trump created. It's been created by many decades of illegal immigration and lax enforcement on the part of both R and D presidents going back to at least Reagan if not to Nixen, Ford & Carter.
It's looking like Trump has the same re-election strategy as dubya. 2004 GOP Presidential Campaign
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