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🗓️ 17 January 2025
⏱️ 34 minutes
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What can we expect when President-elect Donald Trump begins his second term on Monday? This week on The Intercept Briefing, we ask Intercept reporters what’s on their radar as a new president and a Republican-controlled Congress take office.
They’ll be watching the tentative ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, the brazenness of oligarchs seeking to profit from the new administration, and threats to reproductive healthcare. Trump’s biggest policy promise has been immigration, with a campaign built around his pledge to conduct “the largest mass deportation operation” in U.S. history.
Now Congress is advancing measures that could help the administration achieve its deportation vision by expanding immigration authority to the states. Provisions in the Laken Riley Act, which passed the House of Representatives last week with support from dozens of Democrats, would mandate detention for unauthorized immigrants accused of shoplifting and theft. It would also grant state attorneys generals the power to sue the federal government over who is detained or released by U.S. immigration and Customs Enforcement and block people from specific countries from obtaining visas. Historically immigration has been the exclusive domain of the federal government — not states.
“We've been trying to raise the alarm,” says Juliana Macedo do Nascimento, Deputy Director of Federal Advocacy for United We Dream, a nonprofit immigration advocacy organization.
“This would just totally change the way detention and deportation decisions operate,” says Shawn Musgrave, The Intercept’s Senior Counsel and Correspondent. “The Laken Riley Act doesn't have any provisions that change the powers of local law enforcement,” says Musgrave. But it implicitly “allow[s] an arresting officer to trigger an immediate detention for something like petty shoplifting.”
To hear more of this conversation and understand what’s at stake, check out this week’s episode of The Intercept Briefing.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Intercept Briefing. |
0:06.3 | I'm Michaela Lacey, your host this week. |
0:09.1 | Donald Trump is set to return to the presidency in just a week. |
0:14.0 | This time, even more emboldened. |
0:16.7 | His 2024 campaign promises and his first term hint at what's in store. |
0:22.3 | But the national mood feels different than his first go-round. |
0:26.8 | And the road ahead seems oddly uncharted. |
0:30.0 | So we turn to the Intercepts reporters to find out what's on their radar as Trump prepares to take office again. |
0:39.0 | Hey, this is Joan of Aldez. I'm a reporter for The Intercept and I cover U.S. foreign policy and human rights issues. |
0:44.0 | And something I'll be watching as Trump takes office are his policies in the Middle East, |
0:48.7 | specifically with Israel and Palestine. |
0:51.4 | As I'm talking now on Thursday, January 16, a ceasefire deal has been reached |
0:57.1 | between Hamas and Israel. This would end 15 months of Israel's genocidal war, and it's significant |
1:03.8 | for the oncoming Trump administration, which was a part of the ceasefire envoy alongside Biden's team. |
1:09.9 | The deal itself, however, is already on shaky foundations. |
1:13.6 | Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is delaying a vote in the Israeli government, |
1:18.6 | and he's now accusing Hamas of making a last-minute change to the deal. |
1:23.6 | The U.S. has said it's confident this is minor and will move forward. |
1:26.6 | But a lot hangs in the |
1:28.3 | balance. As I wrote in The Intercept on Wednesday after the ceasefire was announced, there's a |
1:33.8 | tangible fear among experts and Palestinians that this deal could fall apart and the fighting will |
1:39.0 | continue. Israel has a pattern of intensifying violence just before peace agreements go into place. |
... |
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