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The President's Daily Brief

PDB Afternoon Bulletin | January 22nd, 2025: Trump's Immigration Crackdown Begins & Zelensky Calls On Europe To Commit 200,000 Peacekeeping Troops

22 Jan 2025

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In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin:   First, we’ll begin with President Donald Trump’s sweeping immigration crackdown, as the U.S. Mexico border closes and mass deportations get underway.  Then, we’ll turn to the war in Ukrainian, as President Volodymyr Zelensky calls on European allies to commit a minimum of 200,000 troops to serve as a peacekeeping contingent should Kyiv reach a peace agreement with Russia. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting PDBPremium.com. Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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12.324 - 31.976 Mike Baker

It's Wednesday, 22 January. Welcome to the PDB Afternoon Bulletin. I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage. All right, let's get briefed. First, we'll begin with President Trump's sweeping immigration crackdown as the U.S.-Mexico border closes and mass deportations get underway.

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32.256 - 55.815 Mike Baker

Then we'll turn to the war in Ukraine as President Zelensky calls on European allies to commit a minimum of 200,000 troops To serve as a peacekeeping contingent, should Kiev reach a peace agreement with Moscow? But first, our afternoon spotlight. We'll begin with a look at President Trump's promised crackdown on immigration, which began just hours after he was sworn into office on Monday.

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56.636 - 79.888 Mike Baker

Under an executive order declaring a national emergency at the U.S. southern border, all crossings with Mexico have been officially shut down for migrants seeking asylum in the United States. Refugee admissions are also being suspended, effectively cutting off all avenues to cross the border previously available under the Biden administration. That's according to a report from CNN.

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81.38 - 107.717 Mike Baker

While Biden had moved early last summer to restrict asylum eligibility at border checkpoints, many migrants were still able to claim refugee status through the controversial CBP One cell phone app, which has allowed at least 936,000 illegal immigrants to apply for asylum since January 2023 from within their home countries before then flying into the United States.

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108.527 - 131.033 Mike Baker

But that program was shut down within minutes of Trump being sworn into office. Trump has also moved to suspend a program that allowed migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to be paroled into the U.S. with sponsors. Some 800,000 migrants had been granted entry into the U.S. under the parole program since its implementation back in 2022.

133.092 - 149.72 Mike Baker

Additionally, Trump has suspended a refugee resettlement program for at least four months and issued an executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship for children born in the U.S. to non-citizen parents. The sweeping immigration actions have brought traffic at the U.S.

149.74 - 173.865 Mike Baker

southern border to a virtual halt, leaving many migrants who were waiting along Mexico's northern border for asylum appointments in limbo. Andrew Selle, president of the Think Tank Migration Policy Institute, told CNN, quote, As of today, there's almost no way of getting protection at the U.S. border or anywhere along a route to the United States. That's a huge shift, end quote. Well, yes, it is.

174.517 - 196.188 Mike Baker

With the border secure, Trump has quickly moved to his next immigration agenda, and that would be mass deportations. Trump's border czar, Tom Holman, said Tuesday that immigration and customs enforcement agents, ICE agents, have been directed to begin seeking illegal immigrants living in the U.S. for removal to their home countries. Now, look, it's worth noting, given the hyperbole and the angst,

196.508 - 211.503 Mike Baker

floating about in media and social media about this issue currently, deportations have been a part of US policy for decades. As an example, during Barack Obama's tenure, 400,000 individuals were deported from the US.

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