Trump says vow to deport millions of undocumented people has âno price tagâ
President-electâs plan to quash undocumented migration through mass deportations met with Democratic resistance
Donald Trumpâs vow to deport millions of undocumented immigrants has no âprice tagâ, the president-elect has said, setting the scene for a confrontation between his incoming administration and Democratic officials across the US.
As Democratic state governors and mayors signalled their determination to resist the most extreme elements of his agenda, Trump promised that his campaign pledge to expel an estimated 11 million people â though Trump himself has given a figure as high as 21 million â would be implemented come what may.
âItâs not a question of a price tag,â Trump told NBC.
âReally, we have no choice. When people have killed and murdered, when drug lords have destroyed countries, and now theyâre going to go back to those countries because theyâre not staying here. There is no price tag.â
The American Immigration Council has estimated that mass deportation on the scale Trump envisions could cost $315bn, including the broader economic costs through the impact on the US labour market.
Trumpâs comments, given in a phone interview with the networkâs Kristen Welker, reinforced an uncompromising message declared to his supporters on election night as victory became certain. âI will govern by a simple motto: promises made, promises kept,â he said.
But the renewed deportation vow has set him on a collision course with Democratic state officials who said they would push back amid separate reports that the new Trump administration would defund states, cities and law enforcement agencies that did not cooperate or operate sanctuary policies for immigrants.
NBC News reported that Trump could withhold federal grants from police and sheriffsâ departments that refused to participate in programmes to round up immigrants.
Democratic officials lined up to say they were prepared to stand against Trumpâs plan.
In Californiaâ home to one of the countryâs largest immigrant population â the governor, Gavin Newsom, called a special state legislative session next month to âsafeguard California values and fundamental rights in the face of an incoming Trump administrationâ.
Karen Bass, the mayor of Los Angeles â where one-third of the population is foreign-born â issued a statement of solidarity with its residents.
âNo matter where you were born, how you came to this country, how you worship or who you love, Los Angeles will stand with you,â she said. âThis is not a time for despair, this is a time for action. Iâve spoken with leaders across the city, the state and the country. We are ready.â
JB Pritzker, the governor of Illinois, announced plans to ask state legislators to address potential threats from Trumpâs second presidency. âYou come for my people, you come through me,â Pritzker told journalists.
âIf you try to harm New Yorkers or roll back their rights, I will fight you every step of the way,â she said in remarks aimed directly at Trump.
Concern over the effect of Trumpâs immigration policy reached Canada, where officials have stepped up border security in preparation for an increase of immigrants fleeing anticipated round-ups and deportations.
Canadaâs federal police said more people crossing the countryâs border with the US between 2016 and 2023, related to Trumpâs first win, had âprovided us with the tools and insight necessary to address similar types of occurrencesâ.
The public safety minister, Dominic LeBlanc, told reporters that both the Royal Canadian Mounted police and the countryâs border services were âready for any eventualityâ, adding that contingency plans had been in place for âseveral monthsâ.
The outgoing Biden administration announced it was preparing to address a contrary concern: a mass upsurge of illegal border crossings into the US through its southern border before Trump takes office on 20 January, as smugglers seek to push people through before an expected crackdown is launched.
Concern over Trumpâs intentions has also reached the armed forces, with the Pentagon bracing itself for upheavals amid consternation about his repeated campaign threats to use the military to crush internal dissent.
After Tuesdayâs election victory, Lloyd Austin, the defence secretary, addressed the matter directly in a written memo, the Washington Post reported. He promised that the Pentagon would conduct a âcalm, orderly, and professional transition to the incoming Trump administrationâ.
âAs it always has, the US military will stand ready to carry out the policy choices of its next Commander in Chief, and to obey all lawful orders from its civilian chain of command,â Austin wrote. He added that the military must âcontinue to stand apart from the political arenaâ.
General John Kelly, Trumpâs former chief of staff in his first term, told journalists during the campaign that Trump had repeatedly mused that he hankered after having military commanders that were personally loyal to him in the manner German generals showed Adolf Hitler.
Rachel VanLandingham, a former US air force attorney, said dangers of the military being used to suppress internal opposition were high.
âThey will follow President Trumpâs orders, particularly because the president can lawfully order domestic use of the military in a wide variety of situations,â she told the Post.
âThere is huge risk in disobeying a presidentâs order, and seemingly little risk in obeying it.â