get-out-of-our-way,-trump’s-‘border-tsar’-tells-democrats-fighting-deportation-plans

Get out of our way, Trump’s ‘border tsar’ tells Democrats fighting deportation plans

  • Biden’s day on the beach as tide turns in USpublished at 19:43 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    U.S. President Joe Biden gestures as he and first lady Jill Biden walk on the seashore in Rehoboth Beach, DelawareImage source, Reuters

    As we reported earlier, Joe Biden has been at Rehoboth Beach in Delaware and is expected to head to the White House later today.

    In pictures, Biden can be seen taking a stroll along the beach with first lady Jill Biden in the days since the tide turned in US politics, following Donald Trump’s win in the election.

    The trip to the beach comes ahead of a busy week for Biden, who will be meeting with Israeli President Herzog on Tuesday before his sit-down with president-elect Trump on Wednesday.

    U.S. President Joe Biden gestures as he and first lady Jill Biden walk on the seashore in Rehoboth Beach, DelawareImage source, Reuters

  • Power in the Palms: Inside the pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lagopublished at 19:15 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Nada Tawfik and Regan Morris
    BBC News in Palm Beach, Florida

    A US Coast Guard boat patrols outside the Mar-a-Lago Club on November 8, 2024Image source, Getty Images

    Donald Trump’s Florida residence and private club Mar-a-Lago is once again the Winter White House – the place to be seen for West Wing hopefuls as the US president-elect assembles a new administration behind its opulent doors.

    While President Joe Biden will remain in office until January, this part of Florida has become a rival centre of political power in America.

    Just two years after an FBI raid found classified documents about US nuclear weapons and spy satellites stored in a bathroom, an eclectic mix of insiders are swarming to Mar-a-Lago, which is patrolled by robot dogs and armed guards on boats.

    For those not blessed with an invitation to stay at Mar-a-Lago itself, the hotels and restaurants around nearby West Palm Beach are packed with office-seekers jostling for influence in the new administration and supporters celebrating Trump’s victory.

  • Biden plans to use $6bn of Ukraine aid before Trump’s inaugurationpublished at 18:59 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Let’s bring you more lines from National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan’s interview with the BBC’s US partner, CBS.

    Sullivan says the White House will spend its remaining $6bn (£4.6bn) of funding for Ukraine before Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration in January.

    He says the Biden administration’s main goal in its remaining months will be “to put Ukraine in the strongest possible position on the battlefield so that it is ultimately in the strongest possible position at the negotiating table”.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has demanded that Ukraine cede large swaths of territory as a precondition to peace talks, while Kyiv has adamantly refused to do so.

    On the Middle East conflict, Sullivan says he expects progress on efforts to end the fighting in Gaza and southern Lebanon, and to free the Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

    “At some point, the Israeli government wants to do a deal that gets its citizens back home,” he says.

  • Analysis

    Questions loom over Trump’s Ukraine planpublished at 18:30 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Anna Foster
    Reporting from Washington DC

    Zelensky and Trump walk side-by-side down a hallway. The Ukrainian president wears cargo pants and a black shirt, while Trump wears a blue suit and red tie.Image source, Reuters

    When we hear who Donald Trump’s new Secretary of State will be, we’ll get a better idea about what he’s planning to do on foreign policy – particularly his approach to things like the war in Ukraine.

    There are two quite distinct paths he could choose.

    The US has supported Ukraine with a huge amount of state-of-the-art weaponry. That’s expensive. Donald Trump has promised to improve the American economy, so cutting off or reducing that pricey commitment – and spending domestically instead – would play well with his voting base.

    But last time he was president, he managed to achieve some really audacious worldwide successes.

    He forged a relationship with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un after starting his term with a war of words between them. In the Middle East, the Abraham Accords – in which the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain recognised and began diplomatic relations with Israel – was also an achievement on the world stage.

    So would he try to follow those up with another big flourish, and become the man who managed to end the war in Ukraine? He’s on decent terms with Presidents Zelensky and Putin, so it’s not an outrageous suggestion that he may be able to broker an end to the conflict.

    Right now, we don’t know which choice he’ll make. But we won’t need to wait too long to find out.

  • Biden to urge Trump not to walk away from Ukraine, US security adviser sayspublished at 18:11 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Media caption,

    Biden ‘committed to peaceful transfer of power’ to Trump – US national security adviser

    President Joe Biden is set to meet President-elect Donald Trump at the White House on Wednesday.

    The pair will discuss “top priorities” for domestic and foreign policy, US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan tells BBC’s US partner CBS News.

    He adds that the president will urge Trump’s incoming administration to not walk away from Ukraine, saying it could spark more instability in Europe.

    Sullivan says Biden’s top message to the president-elect will be his commitment to ensure a peaceful transfer of power, and he will also talk to Trump about what’s happening in Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

    Sullivan also says they will talk about how Trump will take on these issues when he is in office.

  • What’s coming up this week?published at 17:50 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Donald Trump speaks on stage, his right hand extended and pointed finger pointing ahead. He's wearing a dark blue suit with white shirt and red tie. Behind him is a blurred group of supportersImage source, Getty Images

    While the election has come to an end with the victory of Donald Trump, US politics is still chock full of events. Here’s a quick rundown of what to expect this week:

    • On Tuesday, a judge will decide whether Trump’s criminal conviction related to hush money paid to a porn star should be overturned, following the US Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity
    • On Wednesday, Trump is set to meet Biden at the White House, a customary meeting between the outgoing and incoming presidents
    • Also on Wednesday, Republican senators will choose who will lead their majority when the president-elect returns to the White House

    Besides these, we’re still waiting for the remaining election results – including the final seats in the House of Representatives – and we expect more announcements on who’s in and who’s out of Trump’s next administration.

  • Where are Trump and Harris today?published at 17:19 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    We’ve been following them all closely for months, but where are the key players in the US election spending their Sundays?

    President-elect Donald Trump is at his private club Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida. There with him is his running mate JD Vance.

    Vice-President Kamala Harris is in Washington DC.

    And President Joe Biden is in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, but will head to the White House later today.

  • How will Trump’s border plan work?published at 17:03 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    A key message of Donald Trump’s campaign was his promise of mass deportations and a major crackdown on illegal border crossings.

    Trump has called immigration a priority that will begin on the first day of his presidency.

    So how will his plan work?

    Tom Homan served under the last Trump adminstration as the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Homan is also rumoured to be part of Trump’s next administration, and he was just speaking with Fox News about immigration.

    Homan said it would be a “well targeted, planned operation”.

    “When we go out there, it’s going to be done in a humane manner,” he said. “These people will be well taken care of.”

    But not much else was offered by Holman in the actual plan, how it would be enforced, or how much it would cost taxpayers.

  • Trump committed to his mass deportation pledge, says ex presidential hopefulpublished at 16:56 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Donald Trump mid shot as he stands in front of Vivek Ramaswamy sideways. Both are seen from the top of the head to shortly below the shoulders. They're wearing dark blue suitsImage source, Reuters

    Trump ally Vivek Ramaswamy has joined the flurry of political analysts on Sunday morning television, discussing the president-elect’s plans.

    Ramaswamy, who joined the Trump campaign after shelving his own presidential aspirations, says he was not sure what role he might play in US politics, telling ABC News “there’s a couple great options on the table”.

    He did not elaborate on if that might include a role in Trump’s administration.

    The conversation then turned to Trump’s immigration plans.

    Trump has repeatedly pledged to remove undocumented migrants throughout his campaign, but the incoming administration hasn’t provided detailed plans on how it would implement the Republican’s vision.

    Ramaswamy told ABC News the president-elect would focus on “undocumented immigrants, illegal migrants who have really no place in this country, anybody who’s committed a crime”.

    “Automatically that already is the largest mass deportation in American history,” he says.

    • To learn more about Donald Trump’s proposed immigration policy, you can read our explainer here
  • Who will be the next Senate majority leader?published at 16:20 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Now that the Republican Party has secured the Senate, they need to choose a majority leader.

    The party will get together on Wednesday to make that decision, and one of the names being floated is Florida Senator Rick Scott.

    Scott was just speaking on Fox News, pushing his case to be named to the powerful role.

    “I’ve brought people together, I’ve found common ground,” Scott says, adding that to get Trump’s agenda done, “you’re going to have to bring everyone together”.

    Scott brings up his background in business and as the former Florida Governor, saying he is a “deal-doer” who can sit down with Democrats.

    Scott also mentions his “great relationship” with Mike Johnson, the House Speaker.

    John Thune and John Cornyn are two other names being floated as potential Senate majority leaders.

  • ‘I don’t think any of that’s going to happen’ – Trump ally downplays talk of revengepublished at 16:00 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    More now from the morning television programmes in the US, where Trump ally Jim Jordan has had a combative interview with CNN’s State of the Union co-anchor Dana Bash.

    Jordan is a hardline Republican who chairs the influential House Judiciary Committee, where he heads a subcommittee on the “weaponization of the federal government”.

    Jordan was asked if the president-elect would seek revenge on his political opponents when he was in the White House.

    During his campaign, Trump called some Democratic lawmakers the “enemy from within”, and has previously suggested investigations could be launched into several of his opponents.

    But Jordan refused to be drawn in to how Trump might act when he is in the White House, instead pointing backward to his first term in 2016. Jordan says Trump never locked up Hillary Clinton, despite it being his catchphrase during that campaign.

    Bash then pushed Jordan to respond to how Trump might act in his second term.

    “I don’t think any of that’s going to happen because we’re the party who is against political prosecution,” Jordan said.

  • Biden set to meet Israeli President Herzog before Trump’s visitpublished at 15:46 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Isaac Herzog delivers a speech during a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on 7 October last yearImage source, Reuters

    Israeli President Isaac Herzog is due to meet US President Joe Biden at the White House on Tuesday.

    They’ll discuss the situations in Gaza and Lebanon, according to a statement from Herzog’s office.

    The following day, Biden will meet Trump in the Oval Office, marking their first meeting since the election.

  • Pelosi told Harris she’s ‘proud of her’ after election losspublished at 15:31 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Kamala Harris and Nancy Pelosi pictured standing next to each other at President Joe Biden's first State of the Union address in 2022.Image source, Reuters

    Image caption,

    Kamala Harris and Nancy Pelosi at President Joe Biden’s first State of the Union address in 2022.

    Former US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi says she told Vice-President Kamala Harris that she’s proud of her following her election loss to Donald Trump.

    In an interview with the New York Times, external, Pelosi says she thanked Harris for “giving us hope with great dignity”.

    “Obviously, it takes time to absorb an election. It takes actually a while to understand how certain things have happened. But they did happen, and she accepts that,” she says.

    “For me, it was emotional to have the conversation in a way that was praiseworthy of her patriotic leadership but sad for her personally.”

  • Political leaders across the world make contact with Trumppublished at 15:13 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    As we reported a little earlier, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he has spoken with President-elect Trump three times “in the last few days”.

    Netanyahu is not the only political leader who has been on the other end of the phone to Trump since Wednesday’s election result.

    We’ve reported on conversations with Ukrainian President Zelensky, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and the head of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen among others.

    As a reminder, Trump won’t officially become president until inauguration day on 20 January 2025.

  • Tulsi Gabbard says Trump will appoint a team who are committed to ‘his vision’published at 14:59 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Tulsi Gabbard and Donald TrumpImage source, Getty Images

    Tulsi Gabbard, a former Democrat who became a key Donald Trump ally during this election, has just been speaking on Fox and Friends.

    The former congresswoman and military veteran is a member of Trump’s transition team – the group who will select political appointees and set priorities for the incoming administration.

    And while no real clues were given as to who would be joining Trump’s team, she did speak about “loyalty”.

    “Those that he is bringing with him into his administration, I can assure you, will be people who are committed to executing his vision, his promise to the American people.”

  • Sanders says Trump did better at convincing people he understood cause of economic woespublished at 14:48 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Bernie Sanders, with white hair and black glasses and wearing a suitImage source, Getty Images

    On the Sunday morning television shows in the US, much of the focus is on how the Democratic Party lost the election.

    Senator Bernie Sanders has just been speaking with CNN, where he said the working class is angry, “and they have a reason to be angry”.

    “We are living in an economy today now where the people on top are doing phenomenally well, while 60% of our people are living pay cheque to pay cheque,” Sanders, an independent, says

    Sanders says what Trump did well in his campaign was say “I feel your pain. I know that you’re hurting, and I have an explanation”.

    Sanders goes on to say Trump’s claims of economic woes being caused by millions of migrants crossing the border was “bogus”. He says corporate greed is the true reason and it must be tackled by politicians, saying the Democratic Party needs to listen to the working class.

  • Trump a popular US president in Israelpublished at 14:31 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Benjamin Netanyahu may have said he is looking to build on his previous relationship with Donald Trump – but there are no guarantees Trump will give the Israeli leader all that he wants.

    Netanyahu called Trump the “best friend Israel has ever had in the White House” and he was also one of the first national leaders to congratulate the new president-elect.

    Trump previously won favour by scrapping an Iran nuclear deal that Israel opposed and by recognising Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

    But Trump has said he is not keen on expensive wars and takes issue with some of Israel’s settlements in the occupied West Bank. He has also urged Israel to finish the war in Gaza quickly.

    Recent polls suggested that more than two-thirds of Israelis wanted to see Trump back in the White House – but there are those who caution about his unpredictability and his approach.

    Lucy Williamson takes a more in depth look at this here.

  • Netanyahu says he and Trump see ‘eye to eye on the Iranian threat’published at 14:10 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Trump and Netanyahu shake handsImage source, Getty Images

    Image caption,

    Trump and Netanyahu in Florida in July

    International reaction to the US election continues this afternoon with the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has said he and Trump “see eye to eye” on the “Iranian threat” and the “danger posed by it”.

    In a statement, Netanyahu says the pair have spoken three times “in the last few days” – calling them “important” conversations that were designed to build on the relationship between the two countries.

    His statement also touches on the recent attacks on Israeli football fans in Amsterdam.

    The prime minister says “we will do what needs to be done to protect ourselves and our citizens.”

  • Kremlin says Trump’s signals on Ukraine war are ‘positive’published at 13:27 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Dmitry Peskov looks on prior to a meetingImage source, EPA

    The Kremlin says it sees “positive signals” from Donald Trump’s stance on Ukraine, though it also acknowledges the unpredictability of the US president-elect, according to Russian state media.

    “The signals are positive. During his election Trump talked about how he perceives everything through deals,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov says. “He doesn’t talk about the desire to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia, and this distinguishes him from the current administration.”

    However, Peskov also notes, like many others, that Trump is “less predictable”, particularly when it comes to sticking to the promises he made during the election campaign.

  • UK’s support for Ukraine remains the same – government ministerpublished at 12:52 Greenwich Mean Time 10 November

    Shifting our attention to concerns about Trump’s potential Ukraine strategy, UK politicians this morning have been underlining the country’s support for Kyiv while also refraining from commenting on hypotheticals ahead of Trump’s second administration.

    A little earlier, we heard from Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones on potential trade tariffs in Trump’s second term.

    On a possible change in US policy on the Ukraine war, Jones outlined that the UK government’s position remains the same “which is we are supporting the Ukrainian government and the Ukrainian people to defend itself”.

    “We do think that Ukraine should be able to recover its country as it was previously structured. There shouldn’t be an element of conceding to illegal invasions from Russia, of course,” he added.

    Headshot of Priti Patel

    Opposition minister Priti Patel took a similar stance, underlining that President-elect Trump “hasn’t entered the White House yet”.

    Nonetheless, she said “some serious discussions” with the White House are needed. She wants the current government to “make the case that we champion and stand by Ukraine and the people of Ukraine”.

    • Trump has previously pledged he would end the Russia Ukraine war “within 24 hours” through a negotiated deal. He has not said what he thinks either side should give up.