Former
President
Donald
Trump
has
made
immigration
a
centerpiece
of
his
campaign:
he’s
promised
mass
deportations,
a
crackdown
on
asylum
at
the
border,
and
a
ban
on
mortgages
for
undocumented
immigrants.
But
while
Trump
rails
against
illegal
immigration,
his
allies
and
advisors
are
also
preparing
to
sharply
reduce
legal
immigration,
the
Wall
Street
Journal
reports.
Groups
including
the
America
First
Policy
Institute,
a
think
tank
that
has
been
advising
Trump’s
campaign,
have
drafted
executive
orders,
regulations,
and
memos
that
would
narrow
the
paths
for
legal
migration
to
the
US,
according
to
a
dozen
former
Trump
administration
officials
that
spoke
with
the
Journal.
Some
of
the
proposals
—
like
a
ban
on
travelers
from
certain
Muslim-majority
countries
—
are
recycled
from
Trump’s
first
term.
Other
plans
include
a
total
ban
on
refugee
resettlement
and
a
pause
on
accepting
applications
for
categories
of
immigration
with
large
backlogs,
including
asylum
and
employment-based
green
cards
for
Indian
tech
workers.
Trump
also
restricted
legal
migration
during
his
first
term.
Trump
lowered
the
ceiling
on
the
number
of
refugees
that
could
be
resettled
in
the
US
each
year
he
was
in
office.
He
expanded
longstanding
“public
charge”
regulations,
allowing
immigration
officials
to
deny
green
cards
to
immigrants
they
suspected
would
receive
public
assistance.
Still,
sharp
reductions
in
legal
immigration
would
be
a
radical
shift
even
for
the
Trump
administration
—
one
that
is
underscored
by
the
ultra-nationalist
rhetoric
of
Trump
and
his
running
mate,
Sen.
JD
Vance
(R-OH).
Vance
has
repeatedly
blamed
rising
housing
costs
on
immigrants,
and
has
decried
President
Joe
Biden’s
parole
policy
—
which
lets
migrants
from
countries
including
Cuba,
Haiti,
and
Venezuela
live
and
work
in
the
US
for
up
to
two
years
—
as
illegal.
Stephen
Miller,
a
senior
adviser
during
Trump’s
first
term
and
one
of
the
architects
of
the
administration’s
family
separation
policy,
has
also
expressed
a
desire
to
reduce
legal
migration.
“Refugee
resettlement
is
‘legal.’
Chain
migration
is
‘legal.’
Diversity
lottery
is
‘legal.’
Islamist
green
card
migration
is
‘legal.’
And
it’s
why
we
need
the
Trump
Travel
Ban
back
now,”
Miller
posted
on
X
in
January.
Project
2025’s
Mandate
for
Leadership,
the
playbook
written
up
by
the
right-wing
Heritage
Foundation,
also
proposes
ending
so-called
“chain
migration,”
i.e.,
family-based
migration.
The
Mandate’s
chapter
on
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security,
written
by
former
Trump
DHS
official
Ken
Cuccinelli,
recommends
replacing
our
family-based
immigration
system
with
a
“merit-based
system
that
rewards
high-skilled
aliens.”
Cuccinelli’s
other
proposals
include
ending
the
diversity
visa
lottery,
which
gives
people
from
countries
with
low
immigration
rates
to
the
US
a
chance
to
apply
for
permanent
residency.
These
policies
would
require
congressional
action
and
are
therefore
unlikely
to happen,
but
they’re
still
an
instructive
look
at
what
Trump
and
his
allies
hope
to
achieve
during
a
second
term.
(Originally posted by Gaby Del Valle)
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