
Since the Trump Administration has implemented new deportation policies, there has been public outcry for some individuals that are not getting due process or very little due process that is included in the US Constitution.
US Senator Chuck Grassley responds to that situation saying that everyone in this country is entitled to the minimum due process which is Habeas Corpus, which is not a long court hearing, but it is something that each individual can do. As for the high profile case of Kilmer Abrego Garcia that sources say the Trump Administration admitted to mistakenly deporting from Maryland to El Salavador in March, Grassley explains his argument to what has been reported from the public pleading for Garcia to be given due process, and brought back to the US, after the White House stated that Garcia was an alleged member of the terrorist gang, MS-13..
“Well, he’s already had two judges say that he’s not entitled to asylum. And when I see on television some of these people that are advocating for his return, they’re asked by the interviewer, ‘Well, what more do you think he ought to have?’ They don’t have any answer for it. So it’s kind of beyond me how much you should do.”
Grassley further argues that President Trump is being treated unfairly compared to what President Barack Obama did with deportations.
“I’d like to know how the current arguments for due process compared to the fact that Obama deported three-million people and that issue wasn’t brought up then. And if it had been brought up the same way that it’s brought up now that he would’ve never got three-million people deported. So it seems to me like we have a double standard for deportation.”
Grassley does not have any concerns with how President Trump is handling deportations in his second term.

