Watch live: Trump suspends immigration to U.S. for 60 days

President Trump on Tuesday announced he’s suspending immigration to the U.S. for 60 days. The action, the president claimed, will put unemployed Americans first in line for jobs and health care, and applies to people seeking permanent residency. 

“By pausing immigration, we’ll help put unemployed Americans first in line for jobs as America reopens,” the president said during Tuesday’s Coronavirus Task Force briefing. 

The president said the executive order is being written now, and will most likely be signed Wednesday. 

The president also said Harvard University will pay back the funding it secured through the Paycheck Protection Program, which is meant to keep small businesses afloat. Mr. Trump said he will also ask large companies that were able to take advantage of the program to pay back the money. 

Harvard has the largest endowment of any academic institution in the world.

“Harvard’s gonna pay back the money,” Mr. Trump interjected Tuesday when a reporter asked Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin whether he would ask large entities that received financial assistance from the federal government to pay it back. 

It’s unclear whether the president has some agreement from Harvard, or whether the president will ask the Ivy League school to pay back the $9 million it received under the PPP. The president’s comments came during Monday night’s Coronavirus Task Force briefing. President Trump announced late Monday plans to take executive action to temporarily suspend immigration to the country because of the illness.

Mr. Trump announced the move on Twitter, citing “the attack from the Invisible Enemy” and the “need to protect the jobs of our GREAT American Citizens.”


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A White House source said the executive action likely will be in the form of a presidential proclamation that will be signed in the coming days.

Halting immigration has been the de facto position of the Trump administration since March 20, when the State Department ordered consular offices closed and stopped issuing visas. The State Department said at the time it was “temporarily suspending routine visa services at all U.S. Embassies and Consulates,” and embassies and consulates were instructed to “cancel all routine immigrant and nonimmigrant visa appointments.”

On March 26, the State Department said the H-2 program, which includes temporary agricultural workers, is “essential to the economy and food security” of the U.S., so these visas would continue to be processed “as much as possible.”

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