US President-elect Donald
Trump has said he will deport or jail up to three million illegal migrants
initially.
Those targeted would be migrants with criminal records, such as
gang members and drug dealers, he told US broadcaster CBS in an interview.
He also confirmed that another election promise, to build a wall
with Mexico, still stood but could include fencing.
The Republican defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton in Tuesday’s
presidential vote.
His victory shocked many who had expected Mrs Clinton to win
following favourable opinion polls.
Mr Trump is due to take over at the White House on 20 January,
when Barack Obama steps down after two terms in office.
Both houses of Congress are also under Republican control.
For the first time since winning the US presidency, Donald Trump has put a number on how many people he plans to deport from US soil and it’s a big one – two to three million.
For the first time since winning the US presidency, Donald Trump has put a number on how many people he plans to deport from US soil and it’s a big one – two to three million.
Although he says this group comprises violent criminals,
drug-dealers and gang members, to hit such a high mark would involve either
casting a very wide net that covers even the smallest infractions or also
deporting legal alien residents of the US with criminal convictions.
To pull this off, an expanded “deportation force” would almost
certainly be necessary, but Mr Trump’s advisers have spent the past few days
downplaying the prospect of such an organisation.
Meanwhile, Mr Trump also has curtailed the scope of his “big,
beautiful” border wall, acknowledging that it could be a fence in some areas.
All of this is evidence that Mr Trump is grappling with exactly how to make his
controversial immigration promises a reality.
Proposing a multi-billion-dollar wall and mass deportations is
easy. Delivering, in the face of fiscal realities and opposition within one’s
own party, is a different matter entirely.
‘The people that are criminal’
‘The people that are criminal’
There are around 11 million undocumented immigrants in the US,
many of them from Mexico.
Mr Trump pledged during the election campaign to overturn
amnesties introduced by President Obama, and strictly enforce immigration laws,
deporting those without correct documents.
In his first major interview to a US broadcaster since the
election, Mr Trump told CBS: “What we are going to do is get the people that
are criminal and have criminal records, gang members, drug dealers, where a lot
of these people, probably two million, it could be even three million, we are
getting them out of our country or we are going to incarcerate.”
Asked about his plans for the Mexican border, he said “a wall is more appropriate” in some parts but “there could be some fencing”,
Asked about his plans for the Mexican border, he said “a wall is more appropriate” in some parts but “there could be some fencing”,
Other undocumented migrants would be assessed once the border
was secured, Mr Trump added.

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