Journalist Caroline Levit (right) is speaking while looking at the borders of Caesar Tom Human while surrounding the White House on Monday.
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Andrew Thomas/Frano App via Getti
WASHINGTON – The White House says it is expected that President Donald Trump will sign an executive on Monday aimed at identifying the cities of the haven, which is part of a wider effort to target the judicial states that limit their cooperation with the immigration authorities.
The executive order will direct the departments of the Justice and Internal Security to determine the judicial states in which local enforcement refused to cooperate with the Trump administration’s migration campaign, according to the White House journalist Caroline Levitte.
“It is very simple,” Levitte said at a press conference on Monday morning. “Obedience to law, respect for the law, and do not hinder federal immigration officials and law enforcement officials when they simply try to remove public safety threats from our nation’s societies.”

The executive matter can pave the way for more federal lawsuits against cities, states and provinces that intentionally limit their cooperation with American immigration and enforcement of customs. These judicial states argue that cooperation with ICE will drain their resources and undermine confidence between police and immigrant communities.
Keith Wilson, Portland mayor, or in A message to the city council Earlier this year, the city’s promise will try to “maintain the safety of unrelated families by slowing cooperation or stopping cooperation while bypassing the implementation of federal immigration.”
The Trump administration also tried to block funding from the cities of sanctuary and countries. During President Trump’s first term, the Ministry of Justice tried to block funding from many judicial states – but they fought, and they were often able to do so. The defeat of these efforts in court.

Last week, a federal judge It prevented the last administration’s effort To withhold funding from 16 judicial authority, including San Francisco, Portland, Saytel, Minneapolis, St. Paul and New Haveen.
“We are here again,” William Orik, the American boycott judge in San Francisco, who found that the Trump administration’s actions were probably unconstitutional and gave a preliminary matter.
Orrik wrote: “The threat of blocking financing leads to an irreplaceable injury in the form of uncertainty in the budget, deprivation of constitutional rights, and undermining confidence between cities, provinces and societies that they serve.”