Donald Trump called Monday for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States,” an idea swiftly condemned by his rival GOP candidates for president and other Republicans.
The proposed ban would apply to immigrants and visitors alike, a sweeping prohibition affecting all adherents of Islam who want to come to the U.S. The idea also raised immediate questions about its legality and feasibility, as experts could point to no formal exclusion of immigrants based on religion in America’s history.
Trump’s campaign said in a statement such a ban should stand “until our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on.”
The statement added that Trump’s proposal comes in response to a level of hatred among “large segments of the Muslim population” toward Americans.
“Until we are able to determine and understand this problem and the dangerous threat it poses, our country cannot be the victims of horrendous attacks by people that believe only in jihad, and have no sense of reason or respect for human life,” Trump said in the statement.
He added on Twitter: “Just put out a very important policy statement on the extraordinary influx of hatred & danger coming into our country. We must be vigilant!”
Trump’s Republican rivals were quick to reject the latest provocation from a candidate who has delivered no shortage of them.
“Donald Trump is unhinged,” Jeb Bush said via Twitter. “His ‘policy’ proposals are not serious.”
Carly Fiorina said, “Trump’s overreaction is as dangerous as President Obama’s under-reaction.”
John Kasich slammed Trump’s “outrageous divisiveness,” while a more measured Ted Cruz, who has always been cautious about upsetting Trump’s supporters, said, “Well, that is not my policy.”
Ben Carson said he would not advocate “being selective on one’s religion” but does believe that “Everyone visiting our country should register and be monitored during their stay.”
Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski said Trump’s proposed ban would apply to “everybody,” including Muslims seeking immigration visas as well as tourists seeking to enter the country.
He did not respond to questions about whether it would also include Muslims who are U.S. citizens and travel outside of the country, or how a determination of someone’s religion might be made by customs and border officials.
There are, for example, more than 5,800 servicemen and women on active U.S. military duty and in the reserves who self-identify as Muslim and could be assigned to serve overseas.
Trump was also unclear on whether his ban would apply to Muslim allies in the fight against Islamic State militants.
Ari Fleischer, a former aide to Republican President George W. Bush, tweeted, “Under Trump, the King Abdullah of Jordan, who is fighting ISIS, won’t be allowed in the US to talk about how to fight ISIS.”
But at a Trump rally in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, on Monday night, the proposed ban struck supporter Shelley Choquette as reasonable, because “It’s not going to be forever. I think everybody needs to be checked.”
Religion can factor into immigration decisions, but that typically happens when people are fleeing religious persecution. So people of a particular religion may get favorable treatment by the United States, as when Russian Jews sought to leave the Soviet Union.
But experts could cite no blanket prohibition on immigrants based on religion. In the late 1800s, Congress passed legislation broadly aimed at halting Chinese immigration.
“There is no precedent for a religious litmus test for admitting immigrants into the United States,” said Leti Volpp, a University of California expert on immigration law.
“Excluding almost a quarter of the world’s population from setting foot in the United States based solely upon their religious identity would never pass constitutional muster,” Volpp said.
In response to a request for additional detail, Trump said via a campaign spokeswoman: “Because I am so politically correct, I would never be the one to say. You figure it out!”
Trump’s proposal comes a day after President Barack Obama spoke to the nation from the Oval Office about the shootings in San Bernardino, California, which Obama said was “an act of terrorism designed to kill innocent people.”
The FBI said Monday the Muslim couple who carried out the massacre had been radicalized and had taken target practice at area gun ranges, in one case within days of the attack last week that killed 14 people.
Trump’s campaign has been marked by a pattern of inflammatory statements, dating back to his harsh rhetoric about Mexican immigrants.
He has taken a particularly hard line against Muslims in the days since the Paris attacks, advocating enhanced surveillance of mosques due to fears over radicalization.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest accused Trump of playing on people’s fears and trying to tap into “a darker side, a darker element” of American society.
From the Democratic presidential campaign, Bernie Sanders said “Trump and others want us to hate all Muslims” and Hillary Clinton called the proposal “reprehensible, prejudiced and divisive.”
On Capitol Hill, Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona said, “It’s just foolish.”
But will it hurt Trump in the campaign? “I have no idea,” McCain said. “I thought long ago that things he said would hurt his prospects, and he continues to go up.”
(AP)
9 Responses
Trouble is that he’s actually correct. It’s the only solution to a big problem. Obviously it can never happen even if trump were elected. & that’s the biggest problem of all.
On another note it’s pretty amusing to see all the candidates & politicians scramble to respond to his jibberish. Keep em comin Donald! Your making this pretty interesting!
Finally a candidate with courage to say it like it is and openly say what everyone’s thinking and knows is needed to keep America secure.
“Some 27% of British Muslims sympathise with Paris gunmen” (The Telegraph, 2015)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/11433776/Quarter-of-British-Muslims-sympathise-with-Charlie-Hebdo-terrorists.html
Nearly one-third of British Muslims OPENLY sympathize with terrorists. These statistics are even more frightening than the ridiculous comparisons of Trump with Hitler.
70 years ago would he have objected to German Jews being allowed to enter the United States our of the concern (which was quite legitimate) that some of them were actually Nazi spies pretending to be refugees?
Most Muslims who move to the US do so because they want to get away from the fanaticsin their country of origins. They are on our side. While perhaps a dozen Muslim Americans have turned out to be terrorists, vastly more have served in the American armed forces helping us fight the Muslims overseas.
Looks like Donald Chump is playing the racist card again. Does anyone else see the similarity of his rants to that of the late Herr Goebbels?
How can he promise to “protect and defend” the Constitution of the United States when he wants to ignore those parts of it he finds an annoyance like the First Amendment?
Remember, in the 30’s people thought Hitler was a funny clown also.
From 1922 until Kennedy changes the law in 1965 there was no legal immigration inti this country with out federal invitation. No where does it say we have opened borders
Constitutionally president can ban or stop immigration
This comparison between Hitler and trump is such a lie, it’s gotta stop. The fact is that Hitler hated us for no reason other than we were Jews. Trump is pointing out that a small percentage of Muslims hate Americans and therefor should be monitored or barred from this country untill we can figure a way out to protect ourselves from this minority. WHT does this have to do with nazism? It has to do with protecting our rights before everyone else is, and not taking political correctness into the equation!!!!!!
And how would this genious know who’s muslim or not?