Trump is claiming is he will deport roughly two to three million illegal aliens with criminal records, something I agree with and is common sense.
As for the remain 10 million or so, he is already making indications he is open to other alternatives. I told you tards he's not going to be deporting 12 million people. The reality of the situation is going to set in very quickly I predict he will try to handle this in much the same way Bush tried to ten years ago.
Trump didn't specify what he would seek to do with the remaining estimated 9-10 million undocumented immigrants.
'After the border is secure and after everything gets normalized, we're going to make a determination on the people that they're talking about who are terrific people, they're terrific people but we are gonna make a determination at that,' Trump said.
'But before we make that determination...it's very important, we are going to secure our border.'
Did you hear this morning that they have had to relocate a bunch of border security personnel due to an unmanageable wave of illegals crossing the border in the Rio Grande Valley, including unaccompanied youth and families?
He'd better get crackin on that Wall.
I completely agree with him sending home the criminals.
Wouldn't surprise me to see a LOT of illegals going back across the border....happened in Alabama when they passed a tough immigration law and I hope it happens now that its going to be NATIONAL.
Any link?
After Ruling, Hispanics Flee an Alabama Town
Hispanic students in Alabama flee schools amid strict immigration law
Oh the beautiful Alabama ruling............ What do you think happen when those people left? Did the locals take over those jobs? What do you think happened to poultry, meat and agricultural products? How about the price increases?
They're are 2 lesson learned from this stupid ruling...........
1. be very careful what you wish for.
2. most Americans especially whites or black will not take over those jobs.
Just imagine what will happen to this country if we apply the same ruling.
Alabama law drives out illegal immigrants but also has unexpected consequences
Alabama law drives out illegal immigrants but also has unexpected consequences
By Pamela Constable LocalJune 17, 2012
Hidden behind the Banco del Sol and the Tienda El Nino is the economic pillar of this rural town: A massive factory that processes 130,000 chickens a day. Inside, headless plucked birds move along conveyor belts while 300 workers, in repeated deft strokes, slice each passing carcass into chunks of kitchen-ready meat.
For years, most poultry workers here were Mexican immigrants, including some who were in the country illegally. But last fall, after a tough state law against illegal immigrants took effect, many vanished overnight, rattling the town’s large Hispanic community and leaving the poultry business scrambling to find workers willing to stand for hours in a wet, chilly room, cutting up dead chickens.
“Even someone born and raised in Albertville may not have the necessary skills or be able to pass a background check,” said Frank Singleton, a spokesman for Wayne Farms, which owns the slaughterhouse. The firm held a job fair that attracted about 250 local residents, but few were hired, and some soon quit, daunted by the demanding work. Since the law took effect, he said, “our turnover rate has gone through the roof.”
Sponsors of the law say it has done exactly what they had hoped, driving tens of thousands of illegal immigrants from the state. The U.S. Justice Department has challenged some parts of the law, and President Obama’s announcement Friday of a temporary legal amnesty for more than 1 million young undocumented immigrants nationwide clashes directly with Alabama’s legislation.
“All our activities will be for naught if the president grants amnesty to everyone,” state Sen. Scott Beason, the chief sponsor of the Alabama law, said Friday. Still, with the U.S. Supreme Court expected to rule shortly on a similar law in Arizona, champions of the Alabama measure hope that their legal position will be largely vindicated. “If Arizona is a success, then Alabama will be a success, too,” Beason said.
Nevertheless, a variety of employers in Alabama said they have not been able to find enough legal residents to replace the seasoned Hispanic field pickers, drywall hangers, landscapers and poultry workers who fled the state. There was an initial rush of job applications, they said, but many new employees quit or were let go.
Wayne Smith, 56, raises tomatoes on a family farm in the misty hills of Chandler Mountain, a 40-minute drive from Albertville. Last fall, he said, his entire Mexican crew ran off, and Smith and his neighbors scoured the area for new workers. The growers pay $2 for every large box of picked tomatoes, and a worker must be able to pluck fast all day, bent over in the hot sun, to fill two or three dozen boxes.
“The whites lasted half a day, and the blacks wouldn’t come at all. The work was just too hot and hard for them,” Smith said. He dismissed the argument, often made by critics of illegal immigration, that Americans might do the work if offered a higher and hourly wage. “We’ve been using Mexicans for 30 years, and now they’ve been run off,” he said. “Everyone is worried about Arizona. If this law sticks, what’ll we do then?”