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The officials reiterated that the DHS has not yet seen a surge in migrants heading to the United States. "The fact remains: the United States continues to enforce immigration law, and migrants should use safe, lawful, and orderly pathways to come to the United States," the spokesperson added. “After the 21 of January he’ll close the borders with extreme security,” said one person on WhatsApp on Wednesday morning, referring to the day after Trump takes office. Banda said there is a feeling of uncertainty among migrants at his shelter, but he tries to keep them calm. And while caravans like these are nothing new, he said, he’s ready for more migrants to potentially head to the Nogales area before Trump takes office.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump, Alejandro Mayorkas, Trump, he’ll, , Jan, , Gustavo Banda, Embajadores, Jesus, Banda, ” Banda, Francisco Loureiro, ” Loureiro, San Juan Bosco Organizations: Trump, Homeland, Customs, Border Protection, Department of Homeland Security, DHS, CBP, ICE, San, U.S Locations: United States, Central, South America, Mexico, Tijuana , Mexico, U.S, Nogales, San Juan, Mexican, Chiapas, Guatemala
As Election Day finally arrives, election officials, legal experts and researchers are bracing for a flood of disinformation and legal claims as vote counting begins. The final week of the campaign featured three dynamics that could lead to a protracted legal dispute if the results are close, legal experts said. Election experts say that if a clear winner emerges quickly and voting proceeds without major disruptions, large numbers of Americans may have faith in the results. A misleading advertisement from the Election Integrity Network says “The Glitch Is In” alongside a carousel of news coverage of such procedural Election Day issues. The Election Integrity Network’s founder, Cleta Mitchell, promotes her thousand-strong group as a kind of “national neighborhood watch.”Researchers also point to a new kind of infrastructure around documenting and sharing such rumors on Election Day.
Persons: Donald Trump, “ They’ve, ” Trump, Danielle Tomson, , ” Tomson, , Jennifer Liewer, Chandan Khanna, Trump, noncitizens ’, Cleta Mitchell, Elon Musk, James O’Keefe, Mike Lindell, Ben Berwick, Berwick, ” Berwick, Olivier Touron, Kamala Harris, — Harris, Organizations: University of Washington’s Center, Convention Center, Getty, Seattle, Center, Conservative, Trump, America PAC, Heritage Foundation, Protect Democracy, , FBI, National Intelligence Director’s, Infrastructure Security Agency, Service, Naval, Convention, National Guard Locations: Allentown , Pennsylvania, Arizona, Liewer, Maricopa, Beach, West Palm Beach, Fla, Maricopa County, Ariz, Philadelphia, Phoenix, AFP, U.S, Russia, Beach County , Florida
While Vice President Kamala Harris led Trump among Hispanic voters overall, 54% to 40%, each candidate got 47% support among Latino men, a marked difference from the 26-point lead Harris had among Latinas. “After that photo, there was controversy in the family, there was controversy with friends, but we didn’t care.”For Republican political consultant Mike Madrid, the Republican gains in Latino support especially among men are a long-term trend. Madrid, author of “The Latino Century” and co-founder of the anti-Trump super PAC The Lincoln Project, said he’s increasingly seen Latino voters become pocketbook voters. Democratic political strategist Chuck Rocha, founder of the bilingual political consulting firm Solidarity Strategies, said he disagrees with the notion that Latino men voting Republican is a sign of a long-term trend. He said he watched Harris’ interview on Fox News, but nothing she says would change his support for Trump.
Persons: Chris Gonzalez, Donald Trump, , ” Gonzalez, Trump, Kamala Harris, Harris, Huemac Badilla, he’s, , Mike Madrid, it’s, , Chuck Rocha, Raul Gonzalez, Joe Biden, Poynter, Biden, She’s, Michael Perez, Gonzalez Organizations: Republican, NBC, Telemundo, CNBC, Trump, Lincoln, Latina, Democratic, Solidarity, Miami, Biden, Noticias Telemundo, Univision, Fox News Locations: Tucson , Arizona, Chandler , Arizona, Phoenix, ” Madrid, Madrid, U.S, Pennsylvania, Venezuelan, Aragua, Miami
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, the state's criminal investigation agency, said Wednesday it is looking into allegations against an Erwin plastics factory where several workers died and some went missing after they were swept away by floodwaters from Hurricane Helene. Relatives of the missing and deceased workers and factory employees who survived have alleged they were made to show up to work despite the hurricane moving through the area. Fernando Ruiz, the son of Lidia Verdugo, one of the plant workers, also confirmed to NBC News that his mother had died. Impact Plastics has expressed sympathy for the missing and deceased workers but said in a statement that workers were given time to leave the factory. The company said five workers and a contractor were on a truck that was tipped over in the floodwaters.
Persons: Hurricane Helene, Steve Finney, Leslie Earhart, Finney, Robbie Jarvis, Jarvis, Brianna Paciorka, Network Bertha Mendoza, Guillermo Mendoza, Fernando Ruiz, Lidia Verdugo Organizations: Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Erwin, Judicial, Impact Plastics, NBC News, Attorney General's, NBC, Plastics, Impact Plastics Inc, Sentinel, USA, Network Locations: Hurricane, Erwin, Tenn
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration said Monday it is making asylum restrictions at the southern border even tougher, as it’s increasingly eager to show voters uneasy over immigration that it is taking a hard stance on border security. The new rules, which toughen restrictions announced in June, bar migrants from being granted asylum when U.S. officials deem that the southern border is overwhelmed. But the administration has touted its asylum restrictions, saying they have led to serious drops in the number of migrants coming to the southern border. A senior administration official said Monday that the longer timeline was necessary to make sure that drops in immigration are sustained and not due to a one-time event. “It’s absolutely reasonable to want robust systems in place to know who is coming into our country, and certainly, the surges we’ve seen at the southern border have been unsustainable,” she said.
Persons: , Biden, it’s, Donald Trump, Harris haven’t, Kamala Harris, , ” Harris, Nayna Gupta, ” Gupta, Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S . Immigration, Department of Homeland Security, Border Patrol, DHS, Republican, Democratic, National Immigrant Justice, United, Global, U.S Locations: U.S, Mexico, Arizona, United States
When President Joe Biden took office, he immediately halted border wall construction. “Vice President Harris believes in tough, smart solutions to secure the border, keep communities safe, and reform our broken immigration system,” Ehrenberg said. The border bill would have provided 1,500 more border personnel, upgraded technology and kicked off the “immediate resumption” of the border wall construction that was underway in 2021, according to its text. Del Cueto’s union supported the bipartisan border bill that is the basis for Harris’ border plan. “What I would say to Vice President Harris is she’s been there for 3 1/2 years.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump’s, Harris, Joe Biden, Mark Dannels, it’s, , Dannels, Biden deputized, Mia Ehrenberg, Donald Trump, Trump, ” Ehrenberg, Consuelo Hernandez, Hernandez, ” Trump, Biden, Del Cueto, Del Cueto’s, she’s Organizations: NBC News, NBC, Border Patrol, National Border Patrol Council, Trump Locations: Cochise County , Arizona, Mexico, Cochise County, Coronado, Hereford, Ariz, U.S, Tucson, California, , Arizona, Rio Grande Valley of Texas, Rio Grande, Harris ’
In an aerial view, burned cars and homes are seen a neighborhood that was destroyed by a wildfire on August 17, 2023 in Lahaina, Hawaii. A young boy walks through wildfire wreckage Thursday, Aug. 10, 2023, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Search and recovery team members check charred buildings and cars in the aftermath of the Maui Fires in Lahaina, West Maui, Hawaii, August 17, 2023. Lahaina, Maui, Wednesday, August 16, 2023 - Homes and businesses lay in ruins after last week's devastating wildfire swept through town. A woman walks through wildfire wreckage Friday, Aug. 11, 2023, in Lahaina, Hawaii.
Persons: Patrick T, Fallon, Fred Abad, Louise Abihai, Ellie Erickson —, Richard Zubaty, Richard Bissen, Harold, Justin Sullivan, Lynn Ouano, Faias, Jay Ouano, Rick Bowmer, Kuulei Barut, Losano, Leona Castillo, Castillo, Yuki Iwamura, haven't, Erickson, Robert Gauthier, Julie French Organizations: Kahului, AFP, Getty, NBC, Maui, Facebook, Los Angeles Times Locations: Maui, Kahului, Hawaii, Maui County, Instagram, Palm Springs, Texas, Lahaina , Hawaii, Washington, U.S, Pennsylvania, Lahaina, Lahaina , West Maui, Kihei, Australia
In as little as a decade, there will be one retiree for every two workers in Canada. How outdated U.S. immigration policies push top talent to other countries,” Lofgren said, “The last major overhaul of our legal immigration system occurred in 1990. University Health Network began a program this year to bring in more internationally educated nurses and help them get the additional training they need in Canada. New immigrants to Canada and new Canadians take part in the 5th Annual Newcomer Day at Nathan Philips Square in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on May 16, 2019. Citizenship and Immigration Services said it "is committed to fairly and efficiently administering the lawful immigration system, increasing access to eligible immigration benefits, restoring faith and trust with immigrant communities and breaking down barriers in the immigration system, and the agency will continue to uphold America’s promise as a nation of welcome and possibility with fairness, integrity, and respect for all we serve."
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico — On Wednesday morning, as many as a thousand people waited in freezing temperatures on the south side of a metal fence for border agents to open the gate to the United States. Two cities on opposite sides of the border — El Paso, Texas, and Juarez, Mexico — are bracing for what could be a historic level of migration later this month when the Covid ban known as Title 42 is finally lifted. But many migrants aren’t waiting for the ban to end, and another surge has already begun. CBP agents are reporting approximately 2,500 migrants crossing into El Paso per day, a number expected to rise when, absent a court-ordered stay, Title 42 ends Dec. 21. Since the Trump administration imposed Title 42 in March 2020, migrants attempting to enter the U.S. to claim asylum have been sent back to Mexico more than 2.4 million times.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas also criticized Republican governors for sending migrants to other cities in an interview with José Díaz-Balart on MSNBC. Migrants line up after having arrived by bus in El Paso, Texas, on Tuesday. Magnus said that despite the releases and the busing of migrants to Northern cities, the Border Patrol is managing the influx. El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser said the city’s shelters are full, which is why he, like Republican governors, has begun busing migrants out of the city. Unlike Republican governors, Leeser is notifying cities that will be receiving migrants from El Paso.
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