Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - What happened to Trump's immigration order being hit again?

What happened to Trump's immigration order being hit again?

According to the US Chinese website, on April 25, a federal judge prevented the Trump administration from implementing the provisions of the presidential executive order on depriving asylum cities of federal funds, and Trump's law enforcement agenda against undocumented immigrants was once again hit. It is reported that in this nationwide ruling, aulick prevented the government from implementing the key part of Trump's immigration administrative order in June 5438+ 10 this year, which required the Ministry of National Security and the Ministry of Justice to cut off federal funding for immigrant asylum cities.

Although Orlick's ruling did not find the policy unconstitutional, he found that if the policy was implemented, those counties and cities that challenged the president's executive order proved that they were facing "imminent irreparable harm"; If the case is formally tried, their challenge may succeed. The Justice Department did not immediately comment on the ruling, and the White House did not immediately respond to media inquiries.

Viewpoint:

According to CNN, aulick, a judge for the Northern District of California, supported the county of santa clara, San Francisco and other jurisdictions in his ruling-the threat that some cities will be deprived of funds because they don't cooperate with some federal immigration enforcement agencies may be unconstitutional.

"This is a great victory," said james williams, a legal adviser in Santa Clara County. The threat of withholding state and local government funds in this executive order has been lifted.

CNN said that the executive order has been "pulled out" because the Trump administration regards punishing the threat of sheltered cities as a core factor in its immigration agenda.

The key to this debate is the gray fragments surrounding American law. Since there are few federal laws requiring jurisdictions to cooperate with federal law enforcement agencies, the executive order only mentions a small part of the federal law, that is, requiring jurisdictions to tell the federal government a person's nationality (identity). It is reported that although the executive order was issued three months ago, the US government has not yet come up with the definition of a sheltered city.