Published by the Students of Johns Hopkins since 1896
November 8, 2024

Vignarajah criticizes Trump’s immigration policies

By PETER JI | November 2, 2017

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COURTESY OF PETER JI Vignarajah is running to become the State’s Attorney for Baltimore City.

Thiruvendran Vignarajah, the Deputy Attorney General for the State of Maryland and candidate for State’s Attorney for Baltimore City, gave a talk called Justice for All in the Age of Trump. The event was hosted by the Hopkins College Democrats on Wednesday.

Vignarajah addressed topics like the rollback of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) and Trump’s travel ban.

An immigrant from Sri Lanka, Vignarajah attended Yale University and Harvard Law School. He teaches crime policy and constitutional law at Hopkins and the University of Maryland Law School.

Recently, President Trump has announced that he will rescind DACA, which offers protections to undocumented immigrants who arrived in the country as children. The program was started as an executive order by President Obama.

“[Trump] has blamed them for crime in places like Baltimore and across the country. He has suggested that undocumented immigrants drive the challenges that he believes has plagued our country, our economy and our city,” he said.

Vignarajah argued that immigration enforcement today is criminal in nature, noting that deportations were previously run by the U.S. Department of the Treasury, not the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

“Back then you didn’t have dissenting lawmen who were arbitrarily stopping anyone who was under suspicion of being in the country unlawfully, using their police powers to try to enforce immigration laws,” he said. “Today in 2017, the civil immigration apparatus of our country is virtually indistinguishable from our criminal apparatus.”

For his campaign for the State’s Attorney for Baltimore City, Vignarajah pledged to run an office that is transparent and accountable — traits that he says are missing in the nation’s highest office.

“What Donald Trump is doing, perhaps as well as any politician in the history of this great nation, is to engage in spreading an element of fear and disinformation,” he said. “He targets groups that cannot stand out and speak out for themselves.”

He believes in looking at the legislative history of a law, beyond what is written on the page.

He used President Trump’s first travel ban, which targeted Muslim-majority countries, as an example.

“If the law says ‘we intend to discriminate,’ then perhaps you’re allowed to strike it down as discriminatory,” he said.

The President is a single voice, Vignarajah argued, and therefore his comments about an executive order should be considered in federal court.

He also addressed the rising crime rate in Baltimore, promising progressive solutions to the problem rather than the mandatory sentencing and zero tolerance methods that he says have failed.

He said that President Trump’s attacks on judges have increased support for harsher sentencing.

“Trump has made it fashionable to point the finger at judges, and it has caught fire here,” he said.


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