This Article is From Mar 01, 2017

Indian-American Lawmakers Criticise Donald Trump's Address To US Congress

Indian-American Lawmakers Criticise Donald Trump's Address To US Congress

Donald Trump addressed the US Congress for the first time as US President today.

Washington: Indian-American lawmakers today criticised US President Donald Trump's maiden address to Congress, saying it lacked specificity and offered only unrealistic plans on issues like immigration and Obamacare. Claiming that Mr Trump's "rhetoric did not match reality", Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal alleged that he uses "repeated falsehoods" about immigrants to justify the logic behind his "inhumane and barbaric" executive orders.

"Tonight, the President's rhetoric did not match reality. He said things that sounded good, but they were the opposite of his actions and rhetoric of the past," Ms Jayapal said after Mr Trump's address to Congress.

Ms Jayapal along with three other Indian-American lawmakers from the Democratic Party criticised Mr Trump's address.

"He repeated falsehoods about immigrants to justify the logic behind his inhumane and barbaric executive orders that have thrown our immigration system into complete and utter chaos. Instead of offering specifics and a plan to expand healthcare for all, President Trump, once again, called for the repeal of the Affordable Care Act leaving millions without health insurance," she said.

Ms Jayapal, the first Indian-American woman to be elected to the US House of Representatives, said that the President talked about tax relief for the middle class, but the Trump tax plan is nothing more than a big tax break for the rich.

"He mentioned reducing poverty, but in fact his budget blueprint would decimate the very social safety net programmes that help people climb out of poverty," she said.

It was surreal to listen to Mr Trump talk about "draining the swamp" after he appointed billionaires, lobbyists and Washington-insiders to top posts in his cabinet, she said.

Three-term Indian American Congressman Ami Bera said that national security is not a partisan issue.

"Defeating ISIS and keeping communities safe is our priority on Foreign Affairs," he tweeted.

Mr Bera also spoke against Trump's move to build a wall along the Mexico border.

Mr Bera also said that Mr Trump's proposal to repeal Obamacare without a replacement would kick 20 million people off their health insurance.

California Senator Kamala Harris, the first Indian-American Senator, said in a tweet that, "To blame all Muslims for terrorists' actions and suggest we block immigrants based on religion is Islamophobia. Plain and simple".

California, she said, has the largest number of immigrants, both documented and undocumented, in the US. "We will fight for them. We are stronger together," she tweeted.

"We need pathways to citizenship, not un-American & unrealistic plans to break up families," Ms Harris said.
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