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Hispanics See Shift in Trump’s Immigration Rhetoric


GOP-MARCH-ASSESS71As he turns his attention to the general election, Donald Trump is signaling that he is ready to tone down his fiery rhetoric on illegal immigration — at least behind closed doors.

At the same time, Republican officials appear eager to push him in a more moderate direction, telling Hispanics that he has abandoned his divisive primary pledge to deport the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally — even if Trump hasn’t said so publicly himself.

“Trump has already said that he will not do massive deportations,” Helen Aguirre Ferre, the Republican National Committee’s director of Hispanic communications, told reporters at a Spanish-language briefing at the party’s convention two weeks ago. Instead, she said, “he will focus on removing the violent undocumented who have criminal records and live in the country.”

It’s a statement that may come as a surprise to Trump’s legion of loyal followers, many of whom were first drawn to Trump because of his hard-line views on immigration and border security. Trump has vowed to build a wall along the length of the southern border and use a “deportation force” to track down and deport anyone in the country illegally.

“You’re going to have a deportation force, and you’re going to do it humanely,” Trump said in a TV interview last fall. He estimated in a separate interview that the process would take between 18 months to two years.

But those who would like to see Trump move in a more inclusive direction say that Trump has indicated that he no longer advocates that plan. As evidence, they point to several vague sentences from an interview Trump gave earlier this summer to Bloomberg News during a whirlwind trip to Scotland to visit his golf courses.

“President Obama has mass deported vast numbers of people — the most ever, and it’s never reported. I think people are going to find that I have not only the best policies, but I will have the biggest heart of anybody,” Trump told the outlet. Pressed on whether he would issue “mass deportations,” Trump responded: “No, I would not call it mass deportations.”

“We are going to get rid of a lot of bad dudes who are here,” he was quoted as saying.

It remains unclear whether Trump was taking rhetorical or ideological issue with the phrase, and Trump has not made similar comments at any point since. Asked how he would manage the deportations at a press conference in Florida Wednesday, Trump said only, “We’re going to have a whole policy on that over the next three weeks.”

This kind of ambiguity is not unusual for Trump, whose vague statements often leave room for question.

But for some who are supporting Trump and want to see him moderate, the meaning is clear.

“Two or three weeks ago, (Trump) conceded in an interview in Bloomberg in which he said the term ‘massive deportation’ is not used by him, and it was planted by a journalist,” said the head of Latino Partnership for Conservative Principles, Alfonso Aguilar, who recently signed a letter along with several other Latino conservatives endorsing Trump.

Aguilar said that he had seen in Trump’s comments “something very interesting, which can be the beginning of an openness toward the center on immigration. He said he wants to remove only people with criminal record, not people without criminal record. It could be the openness toward a legalization.”

A similar interpretation has also developed among Hispanic and religious leaders who have met with Trump privately in recent months. Trump, they say, has been signaling that he is open to embracing a less punitive immigration policy that focuses on “compassion” along with the rule of law. Seizing on what they see as an opportunity to steer the candidate, several have formed an informal advisory committee that has been working on a series of recommendation they hope to Trump will consider.

“He realizes that there are a lot of good people that are in the shadows. He wants some proposals on how to work on that,” said Ohio-based televangelist Frank Amedia, who is helping to lead the effort.

A record 27.3 million Latinos will be eligible to vote in the 2016 presidential elections, according to the Pew Research Center. While much of Trump’s backing comes from white males, he could gain an advantage in a tightening race if he makes gains with this critical demographic.

Trump, Amedia said, has expressed interests in a plan that would quickly deport “the undesirables” from the country. But the group has also been exploring various options to deal with the millions of otherwise law-abiding immigrants living in the shadows, who are often afraid to report crimes or abuse for fear of deportation.

“It’s not satisfactory for them to stay in that position,” Amedia said. “They too need to have a recourse where they can walk out of the shadows and into the light.”

Pastor Herman Martir, the president Asian Action Network, who is also involved in the effort, said that after meeting recently with the candidate to discuss his community’s concerns, he expects to see a “change of tone in terms of being inclusive.”

“I think because of that dialogue, he understood the need to put together something that will work for everybody,” he said. “The approach is more compassionate, not so much about gathering everyone and pushing them aside and turning them back.”

(AP)



5 Responses

  1. Does TRUMP desire to lose?
    HE better get MOVING,and Stop saying OUTRAGEOUS things!

    “All publicity is good publicity” might work in business, but it’s lousy on the campaign trail!

  2. Perhaps they’re now interested in what he’s REALLY saying as opposed to what the lamestream Hillary loving media reports he said.

  3. As long as Trump clearly offers to deport illegal immigrants who are not gainfully employed taxpayers, he won’t risk losing his populist base, but that might be enough to attract the mainstream Republicans who turned off by his anti-Hispanic statements.

  4. “what he’s REALLY saying”

    It doesn’t matter what he is saying, because you can’t trust him in anything. He has a decades long history of cheating suppliers, contractors, lenders, customers….and now he wants to cheat America’s allies who rely on the word of the United States. He is pushing foreign policies that benefit Putin at the expense of the US and all its allies. The US won the Cold War under Reagan and Bush and Trump would reverse that.

    “as opposed to what the lamestream Hillary loving media reports he said.”

    This isn’t about reporting what he said. We have the audio and video.

    We have the audio of him supporting the Iraq invasion from the Howard Stern radio program. Now he lies and says he always opposed it. But he doesn’t think that matters as he picked a running mate who supported it, too.

    We have video of him promoting his excellent working relationship with Vladimir Putin from just a few years ago. Now he claims he has no relationship with Putin.

    Sorry, Mark Levin, I know you are a Trump apologist, but you can’t spin this one. Your candidate makes Hillary Clinton look like a saint even if everything you say about Clinton is true (and it isn’t).

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