Trump ‘looking at’ suspending habeas corpus, top aide Stephen Miller says – US politics live

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Trump administration ‘actively looking at’ suspending habeas corpus, Stephen Miller says

In response to a question from a blogger for the far-right Gateway Pundit about when the Trump administration could start “suspending the writ of habeas corpus to take care of the illegal immigration problem”, White House deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller said the Trump administration is “actively looking at” doing so.

White House deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller answering a far-right blogger’s question on suspending habeas corpus on Friday.

Federal habeas corpus is a procedure under which a federal court may review the legality of an individual’s incarceration.

Miller told the blogger, Jordan Conradson, he had made a point of calling on first: “The Constitution is clear, and that, of course, is the supreme law of the land, that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus can be suspended in time of invasion. So it’s an option we’re actively looking at. Look, a lot of it depends on whether the courts do the right thing or not”.

Miller’s use of the word “invasion” reflects the Trump administration’s argument that the US is under invasion from undocumented migrants and so the president is justified in claiming the power to deport anyone the administration brands a suspected gang member, with little to no due process under the rarely-used, wartime Alien Enemies Act.

A recently declassified intelligence assessment, however, shows that US agencies do not believe that the gang Tren de Aragua is operating on behalf of the government of Venezuela, as the administration has claimed as justification to use the Alien Enemies Act.

Just last week a federal judge in Texas ruled that the law does not authorize the administration to deport such individuals. You can read more on that here:

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Trump says 10% baseline minimum tariffs will remain in place, even after trade talks

Donald Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Friday that the United States will keep in place tariffs of at least 10% on imports even from countries that strike trade agreements like the one with the United Kingdom he announced on Thursday.

“You are going to always have a baseline” Trump said after his near daily signing ceremony. “I mean, there could be an exception, at some point, we’ll see, if somebody does something exceptional for us, it’s always possible. But basically, you have a baseline of a minimum of 10%, and some of them will be much higher — 40% 50% 60% — as they’ve been doing to us over the years”.

“We had a wonderful deal yesterday”, he said, in reference to the agreement with the UK, which did keep the 10% tariff rate in place that he had announced last month. “We have four or five other deals coming immediately. We have many deals coming down the line, and ultimately we’re just signing the rest of them in”.

“But we always have a baseline of 10%,” Trump reiterated.

The president’s comments make some sense of the otherwise baffling boast from his commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, on Thursday that the deal with the UK had left a 10% tariff in place. “We started at 10% and we ended at 10%” Lutnick said triumphantly.

The US tariff on UK goods did indeed remain unchanged from the 10% announced by Trump five weeks ago, when he showed off a confusing and hard-to-read chart of the new rates he imposed on nearly every nation, except Russia.

On 2 April in the White House Rose Garden, Donald Trump first displayed his tariff rates on a giant list handed to him by his commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick. Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters
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