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State Lawsuits Quickly Follow Trump’s Day One Immigration Orders

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Migrants, deportees and members of the human rights organization "Angels Without Borders" display a sign reading "Trump, migrants are workers, not criminals" during a demonstration against US President-elect Donald Trump on the eve of his inauguration at the border wall separating Mexico from the US. (picture alliance via Getty Images)

On his first day in office Donald Trump issued a slew of executive orders to address what he called “an unprecedented flood” of immigration. Terminating birthright citizenship, a right enshrined in the Constitution, declaring a national emergency at the border and seeking funds to build a border wall are just some of Trump’s directives. Many of his orders faced immediate opposition: as of Tuesday, 18 states and two cities had filed lawsuits attacking the legality of the birthright citizenship order. We talk about Trump’s early moves on immigration and how they are impacting immigrants and their families.

Guests:

Salvador Rivera, correspondent based in San Diego, BorderReport.com

Deep Gulasekaram, professor of law and director of Byron White Center for the Study of Constitutional Law, University of Colorado Boulder Law School. He teaches constitutional and immigration law. He is co-author of the leading immigration law textbook used in U.S. law schools.

Molly O'Toole, fellow, Wilson Center; Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter currently working on a book on immigration for Penguin Random House[[formerly covered migration and security for the Los Angeles Times]]

Rafael Carranza, reporter, Arizona Luminaria, a nonprofit news organization covering Arizona; Carranza covers immigration issues. He previously reported for the Arizona Republic and the USA Today Network.

Tyche Hendricks, senior editor covering immigration, KQED

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