President Trump’s order to suspend the country’s refugee program and
temporarily ban immigration from seven mostly-Muslim nations erupted
Sunday into a full-scale political battle -- with Trump and top aides
defending the move amid nationwide protests and congressional Democrats
vowing a relentless Capitol Hill fight to undo the order.
“America is a proud nation of immigrants, and we will
continue to show compassion to those fleeing oppression. But we will do
so while protecting our own citizens and border,” Trump said Sunday
afternoon. “This is not a Muslim ban, as the media is falsely reporting.
… My first priority will always be to protect and serve our country,
but as president I will find ways to help all those who are suffering.”
Trump issued the statement as hundreds of protesters
marched in Washington and in other cities across the country to protest
the president's self-described “extreme vetting” -- which resulted this
weekend in dozens of foreign visitors and some legal permanent U.S.
residents being detained at domestic airports.
Earlier in the day, Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer, D-N.Y., staged a press conference with some immigrant children
and adults impacted by the bans and vowed to fight them on Capitol Hill
“with every fiber of my being.”
Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., said that she would
introduce two bills Monday. One of the bills would rescind Trump's
order, while the other would give Congress greater oversight of the
president's immigration authority.
And California Democratic Rep. Lou Correa said the
executive orders on illegal immigration “directly challenge the right to
due process under the Constitution” and that he’ll introduce
legislation to fund legal aid to those who are “targeted.”
Congressional Democrats led by Schumer, who said he’s
already appealed to Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, will have a
difficult task getting any kind of measure through the
Republican-control Congress that would reverse the executive order.
“I doubt many Arkansans or Americans more broadly
object to taking a harder look at foreigners coming into our country
from war-torn nations with known terror networks. I think they’re
wondering why we don’t do that already,” said Arkansas GOP Sen. Tom
Cotton, who as an Army officer served combat tours in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
However, Trump is facing opposition for some
congressional Republicans, including Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, of
Florida, and Barbara Comstock, of Virginia, along with Sens. Ben Sasse,
of Nebraska, Lindsey Graham, of South Carolina, and John McCain, of
Arizona.
"It is clear from the confusion at our airports
across the nation that President Trump's executive order was not
properly vetted,” Graham and McCain said in a joint statement.
"Ultimately, we fear this executive order will become a self-inflicted
wound in the fight against terrorism.”
Trump, a Republican, tweeted in response that the statement was “wrong” and that the senators were “sadly weak on immigration.”
The executive order Trump issued Friday imposes a
120-day suspension of the U.S. refugee program and a 90-day ban on
travel to the United States by citizens of Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan,
Libya, Somalia and Yemen.
On Saturday afternoon -- as reports surfaced about
foreign visitors being detained at New York’s Kennedy airport and
elsewhere -- Trump said his plan to prevent Islamic terrorists and
others for attacking the United States was “working out very nicely.”
But by Saturday evening, a federal judge in Brooklyn
issued a temporary halt on the part of the executive order that allows
the Trump administration to deport people from the largely-Muslim
countries.
“Our country needs strong borders and extreme
vetting, NOW. Look what is happening all over Europe and, indeed, the
world - a horrible mess!,” Trump tweeted Sunday morning.
Meanwhile, Kellyanne Conway, counselor to the
president, told “Fox News Sunday”: “These are countries that have a
history of training, harboring, exporting terrorists.”
And White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus argued
that as many as 80 percent of Americans agree with the policy change,
while dismissing media reports about chaotic scenes Saturday at U.S.
airports.
“I do not think there was any chaos,” he told NBC’s
“Meet the Press,” while predicting more people will be detained and
offering “no apologies.”
Priebus also seemed to suggest that foreign arrivals
who have so-called “green cards” that allows them to permanently live
and work in the United States will not be subject to the additional
screenings.
“As far as green-card holders going forward, it doesn’t affect them,” he told NBC.
Kelly said later that allowed green card holders into the country was "in the national interest” of the country.
And Tennessee GOP Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., chairman
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, also said Trump's order had
been "poorly implemented, especially with respect to green card
holders."
Trump, Conway and Priebus argued Sunday that the
seven countries were in fact identified by President Obama in 2015 and
pointed out that roughly 40 other such nations included Afghanistan,
Egypt and Saudi Arabia were not part of the travel ban.
Trump is also facing opposition from attorneys
general in 15 states and the District of Columbia, who issued a
statement Sunday condemning his order as “unconstitutional, un-American
and unlawful.”