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What about San Francisco suing Trump?

According to the Los Angeles Times (65438+1October 3 1), the city of San Francisco sued President Trump, the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Acting Attorney General for violating the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution.

65438+1On the afternoon of October 25th, Trump signed an executive order to stop providing federal financial assistance to illegal immigrant asylum cities. The so-called asylum cities for illegal immigrants refer to those cities that do not enforce federal immigration laws, including San Francisco, San Jose, Oakland, Seattle, new york and Chicago.

When Trump was running for the presidency of the United States, he vowed to end the history of illegal immigrants sheltering cities and no longer provide federal financial assistance to these cities.

Democratic mayors in these cities reacted strongly to Trump's decision, saying that his actions violated the US Constitution, undermined the process of diversification and endangered the American legal system. These officials said that they would rather sacrifice federal aid and will continue to provide shelter for local illegal immigrants and refugees.

According to reports, the city of San Francisco filed a lawsuit against Trump's executive order, becoming the first city to challenge President Trump's executive order to detain funds for sheltering illegal immigrants. The lawsuit was filed by Dennis herrera, a lawyer in Los Angeles, who believed that the executive order violated the Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution.

The Los Angeles Times said that Trump's measures to reduce the funds for sheltering illegal immigrants will have a wide impact on California, which has been actively protecting illegal immigrants. In sheltered cities such as San Francisco, local officials often refuse to cooperate with the federal government in cracking down on illegal immigrants.

Dennis herrera, a lawyer in San Francisco, said that Trump's move would cause the city of San Francisco to lose $654.38+02 billion in federal funds every year, and most of these funds would be used for medical care and food aid to the poor.

White House spokesman spicer said earlier: "The American people no longer need to be forced to provide subsidies for this kind of behavior that ignores our laws."

The San Francisco City Prosecutor believes that Trump's executive order violates Article 10 of the US Constitutional Amendment. The amendment points out that the powers that the Constitution does not grant to the Federation or prohibit the states from exercising are reserved by the states themselves or the people.

According to the prosecution document, "the president of the United States openly ignored the law and tried to force local authorities to abandon the laws and policies known as' sheltered cities'."

Previously, Washington State Attorney General Bob? Ferguson has ordered that the executive order to sue Trump is unconstitutional. Several state attorneys general also promised to take action against Trump.

In addition, four federal judges from new york, Boston, Alexandria, Virginia and Seattle have issued orders to suspend the execution of the deportation order, which greatly reduced Trump's order.