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REP RO KHANNA: A commonsense, bipartisan plan for immigration

REP RO KHANNA: A commonsense, bipartisan plan for immigration

Fox News20-06-2025
The crisis in Los Angeles is a test of federalism and American values.
I unequivocally condemn anyone who engaged in political violence, vandalism or harassed law enforcement. There is no denying that violence we saw from some of the protesters in LA was wrong.
But President Donald Trump's attempt to override California Democrat Governor Gavin Newsom's authority over the National Guard was not prudent and damaged the principle of limited federal power. Californians did not ask for the Marines or the National Guard. They wanted local and state law enforcement to restore order.
In a House Armed Services Committee hearing last week, I asked Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth if he would abide by a district court ruling if they were to decide that deploying active-duty troops to Los Angeles was illegal. He refused to say if he would obey the district courts. Only after being pushed again by Maryland Democrat Rep. Sarah Elfreth, did he acknowledge that he would obey the Supreme Court.
The administration's disregard for checks and balances and nonchalance about following court orders should be alarming to every American.
We need leaders of both parties to stand up for the Constitution and offer a commonsense plan for those undocumented immigrants who are paying taxes and working hard.
Even Trump is starting to recognize this. After facing backlash from industry leaders, he appeared to be considering an exemption for farms, hotels, and restaurants from the ICE raids, which his administration has now reversed.
Of the 2.4 million farmworkers in the U.S., an estimated 40% lack legal status. They are critical to our country's food production.
Instead of deporting all hardworking farmworkers, we need to create a path to legalization and citizenship. That is why I support the bipartisan "Farm Workforce Modernization Act" that would create a program for agricultural workers to earn legal status through continued employment.
Now is the time to pass bipartisan legislation, Mr. President. Let's pass a law supporting a path to legalization and the citizenship for undocumented immigrants who are working hard and paying taxes in, as you define it, farming, hotels, and restaurants. Doing so would be a first step in getting something done on immigration and bringing this country together instead of just hurling insults at each other.
More broadly, as Americans stand up for due process at town halls and at rallies, we should understand what peaceful protest, at its best, looks like.
We can take inspiration from the tradition of Martin Luther King Jr., Mahatma Gandhi, and my grandfather, Amarnath Vidyalankar, who was an Indian freedom fighter. He spent several years in jail as part of Gandhi's movement. I am reminded of how the freedom fighters dressed well, were polite, and avoided confrontation with law enforcement. The same was true of civil rights freedom riders. We need this discipline today in order to break through and claim the moral high ground.
We should also share the story of immigrants who believe in hard work, love of country, and patriotism. This was the story Mario Cuomo told about his uneducated father who worked 16-hour days and bled from the bottom of his feet. In my case, my father woke up at the crack of dawn to be one of the first at his workplace. My parents taught me that by being born in America I won the lottery. They instilled in me a love for American history, for the English language, and for our country's story and a relentless commitment to hard work.
I believe by creating pathways to legalization and citizenship for hardworking immigrants who pay taxes, we can have social cohesion and build a nation where everyone can thrive.
That spirit of finding common ground is what will allow our democracy to lead over China and be a model to the world.
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Democrat Katelyn Zach announces run for Missouri House seat in southwest Springfield

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People abuse Medicaid. That's why Trump's Big Beautiful Bill makes it stronger.
People abuse Medicaid. That's why Trump's Big Beautiful Bill makes it stronger.

USA Today

time27 minutes ago

  • USA Today

People abuse Medicaid. That's why Trump's Big Beautiful Bill makes it stronger.

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Nobel Prize Winners React to Idea of Trump Winning Economics Award
Nobel Prize Winners React to Idea of Trump Winning Economics Award

Newsweek

time28 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Nobel Prize Winners React to Idea of Trump Winning Economics Award

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Past winners of the Nobel Prize in economics have reacted to the suggestion that President Donald Trump's trade agenda has earned him a nomination for the prestigious award. During a Thursday appearance on Fox Business, Peter Navarro, White House trade adviser, said described the effects of the president's sweeping tariff policies as "a fundamental restructuring of the international trade environment." "A lot of people talk about Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize," Navarro added. "I'm thinking that, since he's basically taught the world trade economics, he might be up for the Nobel in economics." U.S. President Donald Trump walks across the South Lawn of the White House after returning on Marine One on July 29, 2025 in Washington, DC. U.S. President Donald Trump walks across the South Lawn of the White House after returning on Marine One on July 29, 2025 in Washington, Do Past Winners Make of the Idea? Newsweek spoke with winners of the prize—officially the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel—about the prospect of Trump receiving a nomination or winning the award. Newsweek has contacted the White House for a response to the opinions expressed by Nobel laureates in this article. Eric Maskin (2007) "I think it is unlikely that Donald Trump will be awarded a Nobel for economics," said Maskin, who was jointly awarded the prize in 2007 for contributions to mechanism design theory. "The prize is given for discoveries in economics, not for economic policies," he told Newsweek. "And even if it were awarded for a policy, it is far too early to know for sure what the impact of President Trump's tariffs will be." Maskin added that there exists "good reason" to assume that, should the high rates of tariffs imposed by Trump remain in effect, "the long-run effects on the U.S. and the world will be negative—but we will see." Roger Myerson (2007) "The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences is a science prize, and so it has been awarded for advances to general understanding in economics," said Roger Myerson, co-recipient of 2007 award alongside Maskin and Polish-American economist Leonid Hurwicz. He noted that the award is not given out for economic policy, noting that former Federal Reserve Chairman and 2022 winner Ben Bernanke was recognized for his scholarly work on the Great Depression, and not his actions during the 2008 financial crisis. 2007 Nobel Prize in Economics laureate Roger Myerson speaks at a symposium with co-winner Eric Maskin at the House of Sweden in Washington 26 November 2007. 2007 Nobel Prize in Economics laureate Roger Myerson speaks at a symposium with co-winner Eric Maskin at the House of Sweden in Washington 26 November 2007. Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images "As president of the United States, Donald Trump has made decisions that will also have great economic impact on millions of people's, for better or for worse," Myerson told Newsweek. "But if Peter Navarro wants to make the case for him as a candidate for a Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, it should be based on Donald Trump's contribution to our understanding of what is a good economic policy." Myerson said that many of Trump's recent policies had challenged conventional economic wisdom, but that to make a strong case for the award the president would need to "publish papers that engage with the economics literature and identify the different assumptions that have led him to choose his policies." "If President Trump truly has important insights to offer about economic policy-making, his publishing a thoughtful rigorous development of his ideas could be an important contribution to economic sciences," he added. "I should warn him, however, that the number of important contributions to economic sciences is greater than the number of prizes that the Nobel Committee is able to recognize." James Heckman (2000) "Let me put it this way: He is more deserving than Barack Obama," said Heckman, referring to the 2009 Peace Prize given to the former president only nine months into his first term. He said that a peace prize for Trump could be justified, "if he succeeds in bringing peace to the Middle East." However, Heckman, who was awarded the economics prize in 2000 for his work on econometrics, said he was "sure" Trump could never win this award "because of his abrasive commentary." "The bias against his politics is immense everywhere and he is not as polished as most laureates are," he told Newsweek. Heckman agreed with Navarro that Trump had attempted to restructure global trade, but said the "jury is out" on the impacts of this. "But who knows. The times they are a-changing and [Bob] Dylan won for literature." William Nordhaus (2018) Responding to Navarro, whom he called "an unreliable source of theory and commentary," Nordhaus told Newsweek he was skeptical that Trump's trade policies had achieved anything besides undermining America's global leverage. "The way I understand Trump's 'successes' is this: The United States has over the decades built up an enormous reservoir of soft and hard power as well as good will around most of the world—a vast amount of social capital," said Nordhaus, who won the award in 2018 "for integrating climate change into long-run macroeconomic analysis." Yale Professor William Nordhaus speaks to attendees during a press conference after winning the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences at Yale University on October 8, 2018 in New Haven, Connecticut. Yale Professor William Nordhaus speaks to attendees during a press conference after winning the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences at Yale University on October 8, 2018 in New Haven, Connecticut."Trump has drawn upon that social capital and is using it like a spendthrift teenager to achieve virtually nothing of value and to destroy many critical parts of the global institutional infrastructure," Nordhaus said. He added that Trump could be a "leading contender" for the Ig Nobel Prize. Past winners of this satirical prize, awarded annually since 1991, include Russian President Vladimir Putin and Edward Teller, the Hungarian-American physicist known as the "the father of the hydrogen bomb," as well as Donald Trump himself, a co-winner of the 2020 award for Medical Education due to his perceived mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic. What Others Are Saying White House trade adviser Peter Navarro told Fox Business on Thursday: "This is a fundamental restructuring of the international trade environment in a way where the biggest market in the world has said you're not going to cheat us anymore. We're going to have fair deals." "Everything he's doing has defied the critics," Navarro added. "The tariffs have been tax cuts rather than inflation, and it's working beautifully." White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, during a recent press briefing, said: "President Trump has brokered, on average, about one peace or ceasefire per month during his six months in office. It's well past time that President Trump was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize." Jeffrey Frankel, economist and professor at the Harvard Kennedy School, told Newsweek that the prospect of Trump receiving the economics prize is "beyond absurd" and that there is "no chance whatever that he would be seriously considered." "Regarding policies enacted, Trump's tariffs may go down in history because the effects will be so bad and, much as the Smoot-Hawley tariff of 1930 did, may teach a generation or two about the harms of tariffs and the value of listening to warnings from professional economists, when they are virtually unanimous," he said. "I must say, I put the probability of Trump winning the Nobel Prize as well below the probability of the U.S. invading Sweden," he added. What Happens Next? As well as the White House press secretary, Trump has been tapped to receive nominations for the Nobel Peace Prize by Pakistan, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and, most recently, Cambodia. Prize announcements for all Nobel prizes typically occur in October, followed by award ceremonies held in December.

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