Tbf.. If nothing else, this is what people voted for trump for.
Fruitofbread on
Submission statement: Stephen Miller, one of the only carryovers from the first Trump administration to the second, is shaping immigration policy on a federal and state level. He’s an anti-immigration ideologue, who aims to make it harder for legal as well as illegal immigrants to exist in the U.S. He blames the US’s problems on “on a landmark 1965 law that paved the way for more Hispanic and Asian immigrants” and has encourage Trump to invoke the insurrection act. On a state level, he worked with Tennessee lawmakers to advance a bill that would “require state or local officials to report people who receive services at hospitals, social service agencies and some public schools despite being in the country illegally. Officials who fail to report migrants improperly receiving benefits could face fines or even prison time” and raised “the idea of ending public education funding for undocumented children” with Texas lawmakers. Although the shootings in Minneapolis caused ICE to pull back, (“In February, the agency arrested roughly 11 percent fewer people per day than in January … It was the lowest level since last September, a drop driven in part by ICE arresting fewer immigrants without criminal records.”) Miller remains committed to his agenda.
This relates to this sub because it’s about immigration and profiles an important person who sets immigration policy in the U.S.
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Tbf.. If nothing else, this is what people voted for trump for.
Submission statement: Stephen Miller, one of the only carryovers from the first Trump administration to the second, is shaping immigration policy on a federal and state level. He’s an anti-immigration ideologue, who aims to make it harder for legal as well as illegal immigrants to exist in the U.S. He blames the US’s problems on “on a landmark 1965 law that paved the way for more Hispanic and Asian immigrants” and has encourage Trump to invoke the insurrection act. On a state level, he worked with Tennessee lawmakers to advance a bill that would “require state or local officials to report people who receive services at hospitals, social service agencies and some public schools despite being in the country illegally. Officials who fail to report migrants improperly receiving benefits could face fines or even prison time” and raised “the idea of ending public education funding for undocumented children” with Texas lawmakers. Although the shootings in Minneapolis caused ICE to pull back, (“In February, the agency arrested roughly 11 percent fewer people per day than in January … It was the lowest level since last September, a drop driven in part by ICE arresting fewer immigrants without criminal records.”) Miller remains committed to his agenda.
This relates to this sub because it’s about immigration and profiles an important person who sets immigration policy in the U.S.
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