Connect with us

News

Trump signs executive order attempting to end birthright citizenship

Published

on

President Donald Trump directed U.S. government agencies to no longer issue citizenship documentation to babies born in the United States to parents who lack legal status, one of several immigration-related orders he signed in the Oval Office on Monday evening after his inauguration.

Trump’s order seeks to reinterpret the 14th Amendment of the Constitution, which grants citizenship to all people born on U.S. soil, a change legal scholars say is illegal and will be quickly challenged in the courts. The birthright order was part of a burst of immigration-related directives aimed at undoing Biden administration policies and wielding obscure presidential powers to launch a broad crackdown along the border and across immigrant communities.

Trump said during his inaugural speech that he will invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a wartime authority, to deploy the “full and immense power of federal and state law enforcement” to eradicate foreign gangs and criminals from the United States. The act has been deployed only three times during conflicts, most recently during World War II, when U.S. officials forced 120,000 Japanese Americans and others to live in prison camps.

“I have no higher responsibility than to defend our country from threats and invasions,” Trump said. “We will do it at a level that nobody has ever seen before.”

Advertisement

He declared a national emergency at the southern border to restart border wall construction and direct the armed forces to provide troops, detention space, transportation, including aircraft, and other services to boost border security.

“All illegal entry will be halted,” he said.

Asylum seekers who made appointments to come to the U.S. border Monday afternoon were blocked at international crossings after Trump officials halted use of the CBP One mobile app, which the Biden administration used as a scheduling tool. Trump also ended all “categorical” parole programs that under President Joe Biden allowed 30,000 migrants per month to enter the country via U.S. airports, bypassing the border, for applicants from Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua.

Lawmakers gave Trump’s agenda an additional boost Monday evening as a dozen Democratic senators joined Republicans to approve the Laken Riley Act. The bill, named for a Georgia nursing student whose murder by a Venezuelan migrant last year became a cause célèbre for Trump’s campaign, will require U.S. authorities to jail immigrants accused of minor property crimes such as shoplifting. The measure is now headed to the House, where it is expected to pass, and it will probably be the first piece of legislation Trump signs into law.

Advertisement

Trump said that the armed forces have “played a long and well-established role in security U.S. borders,” and he directed the defense secretary to deliver a plan within 10 days that assigns U.S. Northern Command, which oversees operations in the North America, to “seal the borders and maintain the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security of the United States.”

Additional orders directed officials to restart the “Remain in Mexico” policy of Trump’s first term, and to designate drug cartels and gangs as foreign terrorist organizations. Another order suspended refugee admissions — a pause Trump officials said will be in place for four months.

Trump’s rapid-fire decrees have been crafted to immediately put immigration advocates and other opponents on their heels, his aides say. They view his November win as a mandate to order sweeping changes to the U.S. immigration system and said the record influx of unlawful crossings in the first three years of the Biden administration demands bold action.

But lawyers say they have been preparing for months, and many stayed up late Monday night to consider challenges to his orders on birthright citizenship and other issues.

Advertisement

“This is hallmark Trump, doing what he wants, when he wants, how he wants, the U.S. Constitution be damned,” said California Attorney General Rob Bonta (D) in an interview Monday. “That’s not how it works in our democracy.”

Trump officials provided few details Monday about how the new policies would correspond with existing federal law, international treaties and ongoing federal litigation. An official also declined to specify when U.S. troops would be sent to the southern border, how many will be involved and the rules of engagement for possible military activity against foreign drug cartels. The official said those details would be worked out by the secretaries of defense and state.

Attempt to end birthright citizenship

The move to end birthright citizenship fulfills a goal long held by conservative groups that say too many migrants are crossing into the United States illegally to have U.S. citizen children. Trump’s order would stop the State Department from issuing passports and direct the Social Security Administration to no longer recognize the babies as U.S. citizens. The order will take effect in the next 30 days.

Advertisement

It is unclear how many U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants are in the United States or are born each year. About 4.4 million U.S.-born children under 18 were living with an undocumented parent in 2022, according to the Pew Research Center. At least 1.4 million adults have parents who are undocumented.

In 2018 and 2019, Trump threatened to sign an order revoking birthright citizenship, but he never did. The Congressional Research Service said then that prevailing legal interpretations held that children of undocumented immigrants are citizens. But the service cautioned that the Supreme Court “has not firmly settled the issue in the modern era.”

The Washington Post analyzed more than 4.1 million U.S. immigration court records from the past decade to find out where migrants come from and where they live once they arrive in the country.

Sending troops to the border

Advertisement

Defense Department officials held discussions last week that sought to keep active-duty forces out of any kind of law enforcement role, a cultural and political land mine that senior military officials have long been keen to avoid because of the damage it could do to the U.S. military as an institution. Defense officials will follow legal orders from the new president, according to one Pentagon official, but must adhere to the Posse Comitatus Act, which limits the use of active-duty troops in domestic law enforcement.

During his first administration, Trump sought to invoke the Insurrection Act to use active-duty forces to help quell domestic unrest after the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Doing so would allow the new Trump administration to use active-duty troops more broadly — and would also immediately be controversial.

Defense officials have typically seen the invocation of the Insurrection Act as a last resort, to be used only when other options are insufficient. The law was last invoked by President George H.W. Bush in 1992 to quell rioting in Los Angeles after the acquittal of police officers who had been recorded beating Rodney King.

Shutting down asylum program at southern border

Advertisement

Although illegal border crossings soared to record levels during Biden’s first three years in office, averaging 2 million per year, his team eventually devised a system of incentives and deterrents to encourage more migrants to seek to enter the United States legally by expanding what it called “lawful pathways.”

Biden officials paired those measures with the harshest crackdown along the border by any Democratic administration in memory. They worked with Mexican authorities to arrest migrants traveling north to the U.S. border, and they issued rules essentially barring access to the U.S. immigration system for anyone who entered illegally.

Those policies produced dramatic results in the final year of Biden’s term. Illegal crossings at the U.S.-Mexico border dropped more than 80 percent in 2024. Over the past few weeks, the number of migrants taken into custody along the border has fallen to roughly 1,000 per day, a level far lower than when Trump left office four years ago.

The latest U.S. Customs and Border Protection data shows more migrants seeking to enter at official border crossings, known as ports of entry, than the number apprehended by Border Patrol after crossing illegally.

Advertisement

Among those seeking lawful entry are the roughly 1,450 people per day who have been using the CBP One mobile app to schedule an appointment to make a humanitarian claim. A notice posted Monday to the agency’s website said future appointments have been canceled. The cancellations will affect about 30,000 people, according to two CBP officials not authorized to discuss the change.

Moments after Trump was sworn in, migrants waiting for their appointments on the border bridge between Ciudad Juárez and El Paso logged on to the app and saw this message: “Existing appointments are no longer valid.”

Increasing deportations

During his speech, Trump said his administration will launch a historic deportation campaign and “begin the process of returning millions and millions of criminal aliens back to the places from which they came.” No government estimates have ever published such a number.

Advertisement

Trump aides said the president’s mass deportation campaign would unfold nationwide, targeting immigrants with criminal records and suspected gang ties. Both categories have long been Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s top priorities, but the officials said Trump’s orders will once more give officers broad discretion to arrest anyone living in the United States illegally.

Trump pledged to immediately deport millions of immigrants when he took office in 2017, but he didn’t come close to that goal. ICE carried out 271,000 deportations during the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the highest total in a decade.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents gather in Alexandria, Virginia, on October 4, 2022 prepare for a pre-dawn raid. (Tom Brenner for The Washington Post)
The Washington Post examined which groups of immigrants could be at higher risk of deportation under the second Trump administration, and what logistical and financial obstacles stand in the way.

Resuming ‘Remain in Mexico’ program

Advertisement

Trump created Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), known as “Remain in Mexico,” in January 2019 amid a surge of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border without permission, crowding border jails and thwarting his promises to limit migration.

The next year, migration plunged amid the global pandemic, though Republican lawmakers have frequently credited MPP for regaining control over the southern border. Biden considered the program inhumane and suspended it on his first day in office, but Republicans fought in court to reinstate it, though their efforts failed once Mexico refused to take people back.

The Department of Homeland Security said the Biden administration had not enrolled any new border-crossers in the program since August 2022, and it gradually admitted those who were awaiting their hearings into the United States.

On Feb. 6, 2023, weeks after a federal judge in Texas ordered the Biden administration to restart MPP, Mexico ended the debate by announcing that it would no longer participate in the program.

Advertisement

“Regarding the possible implementation of this policy for the third time, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, on behalf of the Government of Mexico, expresses its rejection of the U.S. government’s intention to return individuals processed under the program to Mexico,” the ministry said in a statement.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News

A’Ibom gov okays N80, 000 minimum wage payment

Published

on

By Francesca Hangeior

Akwa Ibom State governor, Umo Eno, has directed the Office of the Accountant General of the state to implement the N80, 000 minimum wage to about 45,984 verified public servants in the state this January.

The payment will take effect on November 1, 2024, according to the press statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Ekerete Udoh.

Udoh said the development followed the submission of the report by the Committee on the Implementation of the New Minimum Wage/Personnel Verification, headed by the Head of Service, Elder Effiong Essien, on Tuesday.

Advertisement

The governor, while thanking the Committee for the great work, called for an extension of the exercise to the retired workers’ Pension Schemes in the state.

“Let me thank the Committee for taking the time to deliver on this assignment. As I received this report today, my understanding is that before now, we had a staff strength of 55,120. Out of that, 52,177 persons turned out for the verification exercise, so we still have an outstanding number of 2,943 personnel who did not show up, while 6,193 have issues with their verification.

“Having received this report today, I will be signing this off to the Office of the Accountant General, Auditor General, and the Director of Budget to come up with the memo that they are ready to implement.

“For those who have been cleared—about 45,984 of them—we should be ready to pay the minimum wage at the end of this month, effective from November 1, 2024.

Advertisement

“The Civil Service forms a critical mass of employees in our state government. Since we came on board, their welfare has remained a key priority, and we will continue to do so. I believe this will help ameliorate the harsh economic environment we have found ourselves in, and I hope, by the grace of God, slowly, we will find our way out of it very soon.

“For the people who are yet to be verified, we will give another 30 days. After that, we will end the exercise. If they don’t show up within the time specified, we will take it that they are not civil servants, and their salaries will be stopped.

“We want to extend our hand of fellowship to the organized labour in the state and ask them to work with the government, as we all have a responsibility to Akwa Ibom State. We have done a lot to engender good government-labour relations. Since we came on board, we have paid over 47 billion in gratuities from the over 97 billion backlog we met since 2012, as well as several palliatives to the workers and people of Akwa Ibom State.” Eno said

He said he had accepted the recommendation of the Committee that the verification exercise should be done on a yearly basis. “I have received your recommendation that this exercise should be done on a yearly basis, and I think we will do so.

Advertisement

“Another area we will run verification is the pension payments. If what we uncovered can happen with serving personnel, then you can imagine what may be happening where people have unfortunately passed and are still being paid. We need to quickly carry out the verification exercise in that area too. So I am not dissolving the Committee now; we will extend the life of the Committee for another month.”

The Implementation Committee on the Minimum Wage was set up by Governor Eno last December to ensure a smooth rollout of the newly announced 80 thousand minimum wage.

“It had as Chairman, the Head of Service; Chairman, Civil Service Commission; Chairman, Local Government Service Commission; Permanent Secretaries; Ministries of Finance; Department of Establishments, Labour, and Manpower Planning; Solicitor General/Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Justice; Permanent Secretary and Accountant General; Permanent Secretary, Local Government Service Commission; Permanent Secretary, Office of the Head of Service; Director of Budget; State Chairman, Joint Public Service Negotiating Council; Secretary, Joint Public Sector Negotiating Council; State Chairmen, Nigerian Labour Congress; and State President, Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

NiMet workers threaten strike over welfare concerns, issue 14-day ultimatum

Published

on

By Francesca Hangeior

Workers under the Nigerian Meteorological Agency have issued a 14-day ultimatum to the agency’s management to address longstanding welfare concerns or face a nationwide industrial action.

The unions said this in a letter titled “Failure to respond to lawful and reasonable demands—14 days ultimatum,” which our correspondent obtained on Wednesday.

It was signed by Ocheme Abah of the National Union of Air Transport Employees, Sikiru Waheed of the Amalgamated Union of Public Corporation, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Services Employees, and Abdul Rasaq Saidu of the Association of Nigeria Aviation Professionals.

Advertisement

The unions accused NiMet’s management of neglecting workers’ welfare and failing to implement critical policies for staff wellbeing.

“We are highly concerned that your management has inexplicably refused all entreaties from our unions to address the extremely adverse circumstances of the workers at NiMet. Despite being evidently aware of the clear backward state of NiMet’s staff welfare status in the aviation industry, your Management remains unmoved and lethargic in addressing this obvious malady,” the letter read in parts.

According to the letter, management has ignored repeated calls to resolve issues such as the non-payment of nine months’ arrears under the 2019 Minimum Wage Act, failure to implement the reviewed scheme of service since 2019, and non-payment of allowances, including the 40 per cent peculiar allowance and hardship allowance.

“The workers of the Agency do not deserve the suffering that the actions and inaction of your Management continue to mete out to them,” the unions said.

Advertisement

Other grievances include non-compliance with ministerial directives for the review of Conditions of Service, non-payment of a 25-35 per cent wage award, and refusal to facilitate the transition from CONMETSS.

The letter emphasised that all workers of NiMet are directed to withdraw their services beginning at 6 a.m. on February 4, 2025, if the issues remain unresolved.

“In the light of the foregoing, we wish to inform you that the Unions as named above shall be moved to commence industrial action against the Agency after fourteen (14) days from the date of the stated issues are not completely ameliorated.

“Therefore, all workers of NiMet by a copy of this letter are hereby directed to withdraw all services at the Agency with effect from 6am on Tuesday 4 February 2025 unless otherwise.”

Advertisement

NiMet management is yet to respond to the ultimatum, raising tensions as the deadline approaches.

Continue Reading

News

Nigeria expresses sympathy as 76 die in Turkiye hotel fire

Published

on

By Francesca Hangeior

Nigeria has condoled with the Government and People of Turkiye over the fire incident at the Grand Kartal Hotel in the Kartalkaya Ski Resort where 76 people died.

This is contained in a statement by the acting spokesperson of Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kimiebi Ebienfa, on Wednesday.

“The Federal Republic of Nigeria wishes to express deep condolence to the Government and People of the Republic of Turkiye over the unfortunate fire incident at the Grand Kartal Hotel in the Kartalkaya Ski Resort.

Advertisement

“The fire, which claimed the lives of 76 persons and injured more than 50 others in Bolu Province in Northwestern Turkiye, was reported to have started in the early hours of Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025.

“The Federal Government of Nigeria sympathises with the Government of the Republic of Turkiye and the families of the victims of the fire incident, and also wishes a speedy recovery of the injured,” the statement said.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 Naija Blitz News