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What Trump's time as president tells us about his promise of mass deportations : Consider This from NPR

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What Trump's time as president tells us about his promise of mass deportations : Consider This from NPR

A person holds a sign that reads “Mass Deportation Now” on the third day of the Republican National Convention in July.

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A person holds a sign that reads “Mass Deportation Now” on the third day of the Republican National Convention in July.

Leon Neal/Getty Images

Donald Trump won the White House the first time in part by promising an aggressive crackdown on immigration.

“Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representatives can figure out what the hell is going on,” he said at the time.

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A controversial Muslim travel ban did later go into effect, and by the second year of his term the Trump administration was separating kids from parents at the border as part of the administration’s “zero tolerance policy.”

“Don’t break the law. I mean, that’s why they’re separated — ’cause they’re breaking the law,” then Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said in May 2018.

If Trump gets back in the White House, he’s promising to go even further on immigration.

“As soon as I take the oath of office, we will begin the largest deportation operation in the history of our country,” he told a rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan last month, repeating a promise that has become a familiar part of his rallies.

You’re reading the Consider This newsletter, which unpacks one major news story each day. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox, and listen to more from the Consider This podcast.

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Trump is taking the pledge on the road

At the Republican National Convention this summer, hundreds of attendees waved signs demanding “Mass Deportation Now!”

And all over the country, Trump’s supporters applaud when he repeats this promise.

He was greeted with cheers at a rally in Nevada when he said this: “When I’m re-elected, we will begin — and we have no choice — the largest deportation operation in American history.”

And he got more cheers at a rally in Montana last week when he said: “We will seal the border, stop the invasion and send the illegal aliens back home where they belong.”

Now, Trump’s former immigration advisors are laying out ambitious plans for a second term. That includes Tom Homan, the former head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), who said this at the National Conservatism Conference last month:

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“They ain’t seen s*** yet. Wait ’till 2025 … Trump comes back in January, I’ll be on his heels coming back. And I will run the biggest deportation operation this country’s ever seen.”

Two NPR reporters have been following this story closely: Joel Rose, who covered immigration during Trump’s presidency, and Sergio Martínez-Beltrán, an immigration correspondent.

They have been looking through internal emails and documents from Trump’s time in office — obtained through the Freedom of Information Act — which shed light on how realistic Trump’s plan is to radically expand the United States’ deportation system.

What the documents show

The documents demonstrate how immigration authorities scrambled from the first days of the Trump administration to scale up their detention capacity in response to requests from the White House.

Yet they also reveal how bureaucratic hurdles slowed the process, limiting the administration’s ability to ramp up immigration enforcement to match Trump’s tough rhetoric and stated goals.

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In one example, in January of 2017, Trump signed several executive orders on immigration, and the very next day the ICE official in charge of immigration detention sought to begin expanding detention facilities. Rose told All Things Considered:

“ICE did add about 15,000 detention beds under President Trump, which is a jump of about 35%. But that took years. It was not as fast or as easy as his advisers may have wanted. And I think that’s reason to be skeptical about Trump’s promises this time around.”

And Martínez-Beltrán says Trump’s rhetoric, while sweeping, has been vague:

“He has vowed to deport anywhere from 15 to 20 million unauthorized migrants. But that number is way higher than what the Department of Homeland Security reports. The agency estimates there are about 11 million unlawful migrants.”

Listen to the full Consider This episode to hear Rose and Martínez-Beltrán break down what the documents show, how this is playing out, and what former ICE officials have to say.

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This episode was produced by Marc Rivers. It was edited by Courtney Dorning, Alfredo Carbajal and Eric Westervelt. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.

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Video: Evacuations Ordered as Wildfire Spreads in Southern California

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Video: Evacuations Ordered as Wildfire Spreads in Southern California

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Evacuations Ordered as Wildfire Spreads in Southern California

The Line fire has burned more than 20,500 acres in San Bernardino County since it started on Sept. 5, California officials said.

We worked so hard to get this house. And just the thought of just coming back to nothing we’re just going to roll with the punches.

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Donald Trump escalates tariff threat as he doubles down on protectionism

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Donald Trump escalates tariff threat as he doubles down on protectionism

Donald Trump is escalating his threats to increase tariffs on imports if he wins a second term in the White House, reviving fears of renewed trade wars that hit the global economy during his presidency.

The Republican candidate, seeking to win blue-collar votes in swing states pivotal to November’s presidential election, has doubled down on his protectionist rhetoric, delivering blunt warnings of tariffs to US trading partners including the EU.

On Saturday, Trump went further, promising tariffs of 100 per cent on imports from countries that were moving away from using the dollar — a threat that could engulf many developing economies too.

“I’ll say, ‘you leave the dollar, you’re not doing business with the United States. Because we’re going to put a 100 per cent tariff on your goods,’” he said at a rally in Wisconsin.

“If we lost the dollar as the world currency, I think that would be the equivalent of losing a war,” he told the Economic Club of New York on Thursday.

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Trump is reviving his “America first” economic agenda as he battles Democratic candidate Kamala Harris for the White House, and has vowed to impose a tariff of up to 20 per cent on all imported goods.

“I’m talking about taxing . . . foreign nations at levels that they’re not used to, but they’ll get used to it very quickly,” Trump said in New York last week.

One former trade official, who is familiar the Trump’s thinking on trade, said he could also reimpose tariffs that were suspended by President Joe Biden, including on steel and aluminium imports and on European goods as part of the long-running dispute over aircraft subsidies.

“The Biden people really gave the Europeans some big wins out of the gate . . . the Europeans didn’t really give the Biden administration anything,” he said. “The EU uses the rules to help their companies and hurt American companies.”

European officials have warned they have retaliatory options in place. Trump’s term in office was characterised by a economically bruising trade war with China.

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Trump’s new tariff threats could come under fire from Harris during their presidential debate on Tuesday night, where the rivals will have a chance to lay out their plans for the economy — voters’ most important issue ahead of the November vote.

Harris has criticised Trump’s plans for a tariff on all imports as a “Trump tax” on American consumers that would hurt middle-class families.

Democrats too have backed a more aggressive use of tariffs: the Biden administration has maintained the bulk of the tariffs on Chinese imports that Trump imposed, and also announced levies of up to 100 per cent on imported Chinese electric vehicles.

Trump has not offered more details of his plans to slap tariffs on countries leaving the dollar. But it could hit several large G20 developing economies — including China, India, Brazil and South Africa — or even countries using the euro to trade.

Trump has proposed 60 per cent tariffs on goods imported from China, and has said Chinese cars reaching the US through Mexico should face tariffs of 100 per cent.

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Trump last week expressed a preference for tariffs as a tool for international relations over sanctions, saying the latter “kills your dollar and it kills everything the dollar represents”.

But economists warn 100 per cent tariffs could backfire.

“The dollar’s global role has stemmed from the fact that countries voluntarily choose to use it for a whole range of international transactions,” Brad Setser, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former Treasury official, wrote on X.

EY-Parthenon’s chief economist Gregory Daco said levies of this nature would have “dire consequences for the US economy”, denting consumer spending and business investment while hampering growth.

Daco said 60 per cent tariffs on Chinese imports and 10 per cent universally — and the retaliatory measures they would induce — would cut 1.2 percentage points from GDP growth in 2025 and 2026, to 0.5 per cent and 0.8 per cent respectively.

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When he was in the White House, Trump’s tariff plans — which break with Republican free-market orthodoxy — faced opposition from some of his economic aides and some congressional Republicans.

Resistance within his party has been fading.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Patrick McHenry, the Republican chair of the House financial services committee, hit back at “hyperventilation” about Trump’s proposals.

“Commerce across the globe has benefited America greatly [and] has given strength and capacity to the dollar, but president Trump wants to ensure that American interests are thought of much more highly in these engagements,” he said.

The former Trump trade official said the ex-president was simply trying to return the US to “stable” politics. “You will not get back to the type of stable, normal politics until the voters feel like the economy has shifted in a way that is going to be better for [American workers],” the official said.

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JD Vance, Trump’s running mate, suggested in a recent FT interview that the US could raise tariffs on Nato allies to force them to spend more on defence. “I think that we have to be willing to apply some pressure on our allies to actually spend more on defence,” he said.

However, higher US tariffs on EU goods would automatically mean retaliatory tariffs on iconic US products such as Harley-Davidson motorbikes and bourbon whiskey.

The EU’s responses could also include blocking investment from overseas, and penalising procurement bids benefiting from subsidies.

“Trump’s views are the same as last time. So we better prepare ourselves,” said an EU official.

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Tropical Storm Francine forms in the Gulf of Mexico, with its sights on Louisiana

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Tropical Storm Francine forms in the Gulf of Mexico, with its sights on Louisiana

A satellite image shows a tropical disturbance in the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday that formed into Tropical Storm Francine on Monday.

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Tropical Storm Francine has formed in the Gulf of Mexico, the National Hurricane Center said Monday.

It’s expected to become a hurricane before it reaches the U.S. Gulf Coast — which forecasters say could be as early as Wednesday.

The storm’s maximum sustained winds were 50 mph, the agency said in a Monday advisory. “Gradual intensification is expected over the next day with more significant intensification on Tuesday Night and Wednesday,” the NHC said.

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Louisiana and parts of the upper Texas coast could face life-threatening storm surge, while hurricane-force winds are expected to hit southern Louisiana beginning Wednesday. Francine will bring heavy rains and risks of flash flooding in those areas as well as in more parts of the Texas coast and southern Mississippi.

On the forecast track, predictions show Francine arriving at the Louisiana coast on Wednesday evening. The storm is currently about 180 miles east of the coast of Mexico’s Tamaulipas state. Forecasters say it will move northwest on Monday before pivoting to move northeast on Tuesday.

A hurricane watch is in effect for most of the Louisiana coast, from Cameron to Grand Isle.

The National Weather Service’s New Orleans office warned that there could be 4 to 8 inches of rain in southeast Louisiana, with higher amounts possible. “The greatest impacts are expected Wednesday through Thursday morning,” the office said.

The NWS in New Orleans warned residents: “Now is the time to double check your supplies & review your plans. Don’t wait till tomorrow.” It recommended to Louisianans to charge electronic devices, get water, remove debris from drains, check first aid kits and prescriptions, and have a plan for pets.

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The abnormally warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico are fueling the storm’s development and intensity. The warmer waters are a hallmark of climate change.

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