
Donald Trump has
doubled down on his hardline stance on immigration, claiming Europe had become
“a total mess” over the past five years and saying the US would never accept
people entering the country illegally.
In
the latest indication Mr Trump and the Republicans have decided stoking fears
about illegal immigration will be their most effective weapon in the midterm
elections, and buoyed by numbers showing his
approval rating is
increasing, the president criticised the situation in Europe.
“For those who want and advocate for illegal immigration, just
take a good look at what has happened to Europe over the last 5 years. A total
mess! They only wish they had that decision to make over again,” he tweeted on
Wednesday morning.
“We
are a great sovereign nation. We have strong borders and will never accept
people coming into our country illegally!”
In recent days, the presence of a migrant caravan overwhelmingly
made up of people fleeing violence and poverty in the central American nations
of El Salvador, Honduras and Guatamala, has seized the president’s attention.
He has claimed the convoy, estimated to contain between 7,000-10,000 people.
In
one tweet, he claimed “unknown Middle Easterners” were in the caravan. While
migrants from as far away as Syria, Iraq and Somalia do seek to enter the US
via the US border with Mexico, US security agencies told NBC that nobody had
yet triggered a terror-warning - something many believed Mr Trump was hinting
at in his comments.
Asked
later about his comment about people from the Middle East - many of which are
included in his administration’s travel ban - he told reporters: “Unfortunately,
they have a lot of everybody in that group…..We’ve gotta stop them at the
border and, unfortunately, you look at the countries, they have not done their
job.”
This is not the first time Mr Trump has criticised the
immigration policies of Europe. This summer he said voters in Germany were
turning Angela Merkel’s government, tweeting “the people of Germany are turning
against their leadership as migration is rocking the already tenuous Berlin
coalition”.
During
the US presidential campaign, Mr Trump called Mr Merkel’s decision to keep open
the country’s borders to Syrian refugees in the summer of 2015 “insane”.
He also sparked controversy in Sweden where he claimed - falsely
- during a 2017 rally in Florida there had been a terror attack in Sweden and
suggested it had been carried out by immigrants. There had been no such attack.
Asked about it this spring by a Swedish journalist, Mr Trump
doubled down.
“Certainly
you have a problem with the immigration,” he said. “It's caused problems in
Sweden. I was one of the first ones to say it. I took a little heat, but that
was okay, because I proved to be right.”
Polls show Mr Trump’s approval rating has risen in recent weeks,
with analysts attributing this to the strong economy, his defence of Supreme
Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and his tough language on immigration.
The website Five Thirty Eight puts his approval rating at 43.1
per cent, the highest it’s been since March 2017.
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