By Jim Acosta, Dan
Merica, and Kevin Liptak
January 25, 2017
President Donald
Trump will take executive action Wednesday directing federal resources toward
building a border wall, a White House official confirmed to CNN.
The move begins a
multi-day roll out of immigration actions that's also expected to include moves
related to refugees and visas. Trump will make the announcement during a visit
to the Department of Homeland Security at 1:25 p.m. ET.
Trump himself
hinted at Wednesday's move on Twitter, writing "Big day planned on
NATIONAL SECURITY tomorrow. Among many other things, we will build the
wall!"
Trump plans to
issue two executive orders Wednesday during his visit to the Department of
Homeland Security, according to a person familiar with the President's plan.
The first will
direct the agency to begin construction of the border wall, as well as take
steps to repair existing areas of fencing along the frontier between the US and
Mexico. The order will also include a mandate to increase staff at Customs and
Border Protection by 5,000 and alleviate the flood of migrants fleeing violence
in Central America.
According to the
person familiar with the plans, Trump's executive order will require DHS to
publicly detail what aid is currently directed to Mexico, an indication of an
eventual move toward redirecting some of that money to fund the wall's
construction — and giving cover for a longstanding campaign promise to have Mexico
pay for the structure.
A second order will
work to eliminate so-called "sanctuary cities," where municipal
governments refuse to hand over undocumented immigrants to federal authorities.
That order will triple resources for Immigration and Custom Enforcement and
direct the federal government to identify criminal aliens in the US.
Officials said
Trump would wait until later in the week to take action on visas and refugees,
potentially as early as Thursday.
An order being
prepared for Trump's signature includes the drastic measure of suspending the
entire refugee program for four months in an attempt to gauge which country's
migrants pose the least risk for US national security. A program for admitting
Syrian refugees, who are fleeing civil war and a humanitarian crisis, would be
ended indefinitely.
The measure being
drafted specifies that migrants who engage in bigotry, so-called "honor
killings" by males of their female relatives, and violence against women
shouldn't be admitted. It caps the total number of refugees admitted in the
2017 fiscal year at 50,000. And it directs the Pentagon and US State Department
to plan "safe zones" inside Syria, which the previous administration
rejected as unlikely to alleviate civilian suffering.
Trump launched
his campaign on a hardline immigration policy, proposing to build a
"great, great wall" along the US-Mexico border and later to institute
a "complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States" until the
US government could properly vet people coming in.
But as time went
on, Trump's rhetoric on immigration began to change and, at times, soften.
His aides
eventually walked back the Muslim ban to a ban on immigration from countries
with widespread terrorism issues. And while Trump promised to deport all people
in the country illegal throughout the campaign, Sean Spicer, his press
secretary, said Monday that repealing President Barack Obama's two immigration
executive actions were not the President's prime focus.
"First and
foremost, the President's been very, very clear that we need to direct agencies
to focus on those who are in this country illegally and have a record -- a
criminal record or poses a threat to the American people," Spicer said.
"That's where the priorities going to be."
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