Trump to deploy military to border in slew of executive orders - report
Donald Trump will sign 11 border-related executive orders, including one authorizing the deployment of US troops to the border, Fox News reports.
The outlet reports that in one order, Trump will immediately direct the federal government to resume construction of the border wall, end Biden-era parole policies including the CBP One app, and bring back the so-called Remain in Mexico policy, under which asylum seekers were forced to wait in dangerous border cities while their applications were processed.
Another second order will order American troops to be deployed to the border under US Northern Command and “instruct the military to prioritize our own borders and territorial integrity in strategic planning for its operations,” according to Fox.
A third order will designate international cartels and organizations as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) and Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGT), which will allow for targeted action against members, including financial penalties.
The orders will be three of the expected 11 border-related executive orders that Trump is expected to sign on Monday, it says. He is expected to announce some during his inauguration address, and others during signings at the White House.
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Trump to declare national emergency at border - report
Donald Trump will declare a national emergency at the US southern border with Mexico on Monday and announce plans to send additional armed forces to help secure the border, Reuters is reporting, citing an incoming Trump administration official.
Trump will also issue an executive order ending “radical and wasteful” diversity, equity and inclusion programs inside the federal government, the official said.
According to Reuters, the official said Trump will also:
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Direct the military to prioritize the US border and territorial integrity
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End the “catch and release” policy
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Move to end birthright citizenship
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End asylum and close the border to immigrants entering illegally
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Reinstate “remain in Mexico” policy and building the border wall
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10 executive orders on the border to be issued on Monday
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Sign an executive order declaring a national energy emergency
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Sign a memorandum on inflation which envisions an ‘all of government response’ to inflation
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Sign an executive order saying that US policy will recognize two sexes: male and female
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Will ensure official government documents, such as passports and visas, reflect sex accurately
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Establish Department of Government Efficiency (Doge)
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Restore death penalty in public safety
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Has no specific target for the oil price
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Sign an executive order ending federal government DEI programs
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Will suspend refugee resettlement for at least four months
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Will put an end to the electric vehicle mandate
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Designate criminal cartels as global terrorists
Helena Smith
Nigel Farage, who has flown into Washington DC. for Donald Trump’s inauguration with other right wing enthusiasts, has made sure to play down his spat with Elon Musk.
The Reform UK leader, who has described the president-elect’s victory as heralding the start of a “political tide that is going to sweep across the western world,” said despite their disagreement over jailed far-right activist Tommy Robinson his differences with the multi-billionaire were over.
He was now, he bragged, being reposted by Musk on X, the tech entrepreneur’s social media platform formerly known as Twitter. “Musk is a hero figure when it comes to free speech, and when it comes to dreaming. He is an amazing human being,” Farage said in a podcast interview with the anti-conformist Cypriot MEP Fidias Panayiotou. “He thinks the western world is going to hell and he’s right, that’s exactly how I feel about it.”
Earlier this month the Space X and Tesla mogul in what was seen as a highly embarrassing switch of support for the British politician, called for Farage to be replaced as leader of the Reform UK party saying he “doesn’t have what it takes.”
“The Reform party needs a new leader,” he wrote in a post on 5 January.
But in the interview with Panayiotou, who is also regularly re-tweeted by Musk, Farage put the spat down to the disagreement the two men have over Robinson. “Since then, he has been retweeting me. I don’t see a long-term problem,” he said in the podcast aired hours before his departure for the US.
Robinson, a far right provocateur whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, played a leading role in stoking race riots in the UK last August. He is currently serving an 18-month prison sentence for contempt of court.
In another post released after he called for Farage to be replaced, Musk wrote: “Free Tommy Robinson now.”
Farage told the BBC that he hoped Trump’s inauguration would provide the opportunity to “have a conversation with [Musk] on a variety of things” including the jailed activist.
Dr Anthony Fauci said he is “grateful” for the pardon he received from outgoing president Joe Biden and said he has committed no crime and sees no grounds for prosecution.
“It feels good and I’m grateful to the president for doing it,” he told CNN.
“I have done nothing wrong. Certainly nothing criminal. No grounds at all.”
Donald Trump will issue a memo on Monday directing agencies to investigate trade deficits and unfair trade practices, but stop short of imposing new tariffs on his first day in office, the Wall Street Journal is reporting.
The presidential memo directs federal agencies to investigate and remedy “persistent trade deficits and address unfair trade and currency policies by other nations”, the outlet writes.
It will direct agencies to assess China’s compliance with its 2020 trade deal with the US, as well as the status of the US-Mexico-Canada agreement (Usmca), it says.
Trump arrives at St John's Church with Melania
Donald Trump and Melania Trump have arrived at St John’s Church for a service ahead of the inauguration.
Trump’s vice president-elect, JD Vance and his wife, Usha Vance, were also pictured arriving at the church.
Trump to deploy military to border in slew of executive orders - report
Donald Trump will sign 11 border-related executive orders, including one authorizing the deployment of US troops to the border, Fox News reports.
The outlet reports that in one order, Trump will immediately direct the federal government to resume construction of the border wall, end Biden-era parole policies including the CBP One app, and bring back the so-called Remain in Mexico policy, under which asylum seekers were forced to wait in dangerous border cities while their applications were processed.
Another second order will order American troops to be deployed to the border under US Northern Command and “instruct the military to prioritize our own borders and territorial integrity in strategic planning for its operations,” according to Fox.
A third order will designate international cartels and organizations as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) and Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGT), which will allow for targeted action against members, including financial penalties.
The orders will be three of the expected 11 border-related executive orders that Trump is expected to sign on Monday, it says. He is expected to announce some during his inauguration address, and others during signings at the White House.
Thomas Graham
It is cold and quiet in Casa del Migrante, a shelter in Ciudad Juárez, on the US-Mexico border. A group of men play dominoes, another shoots hoops alone, and a young couple watch their kids play with superhero toys.
“Some people get here and don’t want to go back outside,” said Ivonne López, a social worker. “They’re afraid.”
With Donald Trump’s return to power, the rules of US immigration are set for drastic change. While border cities like Juárez prepare for possible mass deportations, criminal groups are lying in wait to kidnap and extort migrants – and also offer them a way back across the border.
Besides deportations, Trump wants to cancel CBP One, the app that migrants in Mexico use to arrange US asylum appointments, and to bring back the so-called Remain in Mexico policy, under which asylum seekers were forced to wait in dangerous border cities while their applications were processed.
The incoming administration also reportedly wants to revive Title 42, the pandemic-era public health policy that expelled people almost 3m times without letting them request asylum.
Experts say that each of these moves would increase the number of migrants in Mexico’s border cities. Taken together, their effect could be overwhelming.
Donald Trump’s family have been pictured arriving at St John’s Church in Washington DC for this morning’s service.
Hungary’s nationalist prime minister, Viktor Orbán, said Donald Trump’s presidency will help set off a second wave of massive right-wing political change in Europe.
“Only a few hours and even the sun will shine differently in Brussels. A new president in the US, a large faction of patriots in Brussels, great enthusiasm,” Orbán told a press conference on Monday, Reuters reported.
So the great attack can start. Hereby I launch the second phase of the offensive that aims to occupy Brussels.
The Hungarian leader and longtime Trump supporter will not be attending today’s inauguration.
Summary of the day so far …
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Donald Trump supporters have begun to gather in Washington DC ahead of his inauguration as the 47th president of the US
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The ceremony will take place indoors at noon (5pm GMT), with vice-president elect JD Vance taking his oath ahead of Trump
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Trump’s address has been billed in advance as “more optimistic” than his 2017 speech which described “American carnage”. He is expected to call for a “revolution of common sense.”
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The new president is expected to unleash up to 100 executive orders with immigration, energy, trade tariffs, January 6 pardons and transgender rights in his sights
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Joe Biden has pardoned Dr Anthony Fauci, retired Gen Mark Milley and members of the House committee that investigated the January 6 attack on the US Capitol, using the extraordinary powers of his office in his final hours to guard against potential “revenge” by the incoming administration
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The Washington Post reports Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” – DOGE – initiative will face a lawsuit within minutes of the inauguration
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Musk will attend the ceremony, alongside Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew is also expected to attend, a day after the app thanked Trump for a stay of a ban that Trump himself had initially called for in 2020
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That is it from me, Martin Belam, in London. I am handing over to my colleague Léonie Chao-Fong over in the US
Mark Milley says he is 'deeply grateful' for Biden pardon
Retired Gen Mark Milley has given a reaction to news that outgoing president Joe Biden has issued him a last minute pre-emptive pardon ahead of the Trump administration taking power again.
In a statement Milley said:
My family and I are deeply grateful for the president’s action today. After forty-three years of faithful service in uniform to our nation, protecting and defending the constitution, I do not wish to spend whatever remaining time the Lord grants me fighting those who unjustly might seek retribution for perceived slights. I do not want to put my family, my friends, and those with whom I served through the resulting distraction, expense, and anxiety.
Biden has pardoned Dr Anthony Fauci, retired and members of the House committee that investigated the January 6 attack on the US Capitol.
Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said on Monday he hopes US president-elect Donald Trump will have a “fruitful” second term in the White House and maintain his country’s “historic” partnership with Latin America’s No 1 economy.
“On our side, we do not want to get into any fight with the US or with Venezuela, China, India, Russia,” Reuters reports Lula said. “We want peace, harmony, and relations in which diplomacy is the most important thing.”
French prime minister Francois Bayrou warned on Monday that France and Europe as a whole would have to stand up to US president-elect Donald Trump and his policies, or face being “crushed”, Reuters reports.
“The US has decided to embark upon an extremely domineering form of politics, via the dollar, via its industrial policy, via the fact that it can capture the world’s investments and the world’s research,” Bayrou told reporters, as he held a New Year’s address in the city of Pau.
“And if we don’t do anything, our fate is very simple – we will be dominated. We will be crushed. We will be marginalised,” he also said.
Italy's Meloni expected to be only European leader at inauguration
Angela Giuffrida
Angela Giuffrida is the Guardian’s Rome correspondent
Giorgia Meloni is thought to be the only European prime minister attending the inauguration, which Manlio Messina, an MP from her far-right Brothers of Italy party, said “reiterated Italy’s role in strengthening relations between Europe and the US”.
He added: “Meloni’s ability to build a privileged dialogue with the White House makes our country a central player in the main international dynamics.”
Daily Italian newspaper, La Repubblica, reported that Meloni might even snatch a one-to-one meeting, albeit a brief one, with Trump before the event. “Therefore overtaking Keir Starmer, the British prime minister, who by tradition is received first by the White House plenipotentiary at the start of a [presidential] mandate, and who was not even invited,” the newspaper said.
Meloni is a longtime supporter of Trump who travelled to some of his political gatherings before she came to power in October 2022. She has also forged close relations with his billionaire ally, Elon Musk.
The Italian leader made a flying visit to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago golf club in Florida earlier this month, during which Trump described her as “a fantastic woman” who is “really taking Europe by storm.
Observers have said that common views on issues ranging from immigration to abortion, alongside the links with Musk, could result in Meloni becoming Trump’s main interlocutor in Europe
Hungary’s nationalist prime minister, Victor Orbán, another Trump supporter, was invited but will not be attending.
Elon Musk’s DOGE to be sued within minutes of Trump inauguration – reports
The Washington Post reports that Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” – DOGE – initiative will face a lawsuit within minutes of Donald Trump’s inauguration later today.
Jeff Stein writes:
In a 30-page complaint obtained by the Washington Post ahead of its filing, the public interest law firm National Security Counselors says that the nongovernmental DOGE panel is breaking a 1972 law that requires advisory committees to the executive branch to follow certain rules on disclosure, hiring and other practices.
Biden issues pre-emptive pardons to Milley, Dr Fauci and Jan 6 committee members
US president Joe Biden on Monday issued pre-emptive pardons for Gen Mark Milley, Dr Anthony Fauci and members of the January 6 congressional committee and witnesses, saying they “do not deserve to be the targets of unjustified and politically motivated prosecutions.”
“Our nation relies on dedicated, selfless public servants every day. They are the lifeblood of our democracy,” Biden said in a statement. “Yet alarmingly, public servants have been subjected to ongoing threats and intimidation for faithfully discharging their duties.”
More details soon …
CNN’s Evan Perez reports that the incoming Trump administration has still not carried out some important duties before taking over today.
Perez writes:
While this Trump transition has been less chaotic than 2017, the current Trump transition has been slow to do the basic things needed to take the reins of government.
[That is] potentially a problem today if there’s a national security emergency and someone needs to be ready to sign Fisa warrants.
As of last night, the incoming Trump team still had not told Department of Justice who the new acting attorney general would be.
At noon, the last person authorized to sign Fisa warrants will leave without having someone to hand off to.