Trump heading to Mexico ahead of immigration speech
EVERETT, Washington – The Associated Press
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump reads from a t teleprompter as he speaks during a campaign rally in Everett, Washington, U.S., August 30, 2016. REUTERS photo
Donald Trump will be taking his first foreign trip as the Republican presidential nominee on Aug. 31, making a quick visit to Mexico, a nation he derided as the home of rapists and criminals as he launched his campaign.The meeting with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, who earlier this year compared the billionaire candidate to Hitler, comes hours before Trump is set to deliver a highly-anticipated immigration speech. It will be a defining issue for Trump, but one on which he has appeared to waiver.
After saying during his primary campaign he would expel all of the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally with a “deportation force,” Trump has suggested recently he might be open to “softening” his stance as he tries to win over more moderate general election voters.
Trump took to Twitter on the night of Aug. 30 to say he looks “very much forward” to meeting with Pena Nieto. The Mexican leader’s office confirmed the meeting with its own tweet, saying the two men would meet privately.
Pena Nieto cast a different tone late Aug. 30, writing on Twitter of the visit, “I believe in dialogue to promote Mexico’s interests in the world and, principally, to protect Mexicans wherever they are.”
Pena Nieto has been sharply critical of Trump’s original immigration policy, particularly the Republican’s plan to build a wall along the length of the southern border and his insistence that Mexico would pay for it. In a March interview, Pena Nieto said that “there is no scenario” under which Mexico would do so and compared Trump’s language to that of dictators Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini.
In meetings recently with Hispanic supporters, Trump had suggested he could be open to allowing some people living in the country illegally to stay. After one such roundtable this month, his new campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, said Trump’s stance on using a deportation force to expel people was “to be determined.”
In the days since, Trump and his staff have broadcast varied and conflicting messages - though on Aug. 31 Conway appeared to make clear that Trump had decided against allowing immigrants in the U.S. illegally to stay.
“The point that Mr. Trump has made again and again is that you don’t get amnesty and you don’t get legalization since you broke the law to be here in the first place. But then he also respects it’s a complex issue,” Conway said in an interview with MSNBC. She added that Trump’s plan would be “the toughest on illegal immigration than anyone’s ever been and he means it, he has meant it from day one.”
While Trump’s visit came as a surprise, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a close Trump adviser, has been among those pushing Trump to make the trip, according to a person familiar with their conversations who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to discuss them publicly. Christie made his own successful trip to Mexico City in September 2014 and has a warm relationship with the Mexican president.
Last week, Pena Nieto extended invitations to visit Mexico to both Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton, who met with him in Mexico in 2014. The Washington Post first reported Aug. 30 that Trump was considering making the trip to Mexico.