Current:Home > FinanceTrump says he'd bring back "travel ban" that's "even bigger than before" -Elevate Money Guide
Trump says he'd bring back "travel ban" that's "even bigger than before"
View
Date:2025-04-14 09:11:37
Former President Trump said Friday for the first time publicly during the 2024 presidential campaign that he would bring back a travel ban "even bigger than before," alluding to his administration's restrictions on travelers from heavily Muslim countries.
The first two bans faced steep challenges in court, but the third version of the ban was upheld by the Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision in 2018. That ban barred nearly all travelers from five mainly Muslim countries, in addition to North Korea and Venezuela. President Biden signed an executive order reversing the ban his first week in office.
Trump made the comment in Council Bluffs, Iowa, as he made his pitch to voters in the largely White state.
"Under the Trump administration, we imposed extreme vetting and put on a powerful travel ban to keep radical Islamic terrorists and jihadists out of our country," Trump told his audience. "Well, how did that work out? We had no problem, right? They knew they couldn't come here if they had that moniker. They couldn't come here."
"When I return to office, the travel ban is coming back even bigger than before and much stronger than before. We don't want people blowing up our shopping centers. We don't want people blowing up our cities and we don't want people stealing our farms. So it's not gonna happen."
Trump didn't say how he would expand a travel ban beyond the version he implemented during his administration.
The Daily Beast reported in May that Trump had for months been telling those close to him that he plans to bring back the ban if reelected in 2024.
- In:
- Donald Trump
Kathryn Watson is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital based in Washington, D.C.
veryGood! (53112)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Latin group RBD returns after 15-year hiatus with a message: Pop is not dead
- Opinion polls show Australians likely to reject Indigenous Voice to Parliament at referendum
- Dyson Flash Sale: Score $250 Off the V8 Animal Cordfree Vacuum
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- 'I just want her back': Israeli mom worries daughter taken hostage by Hamas militants
- Panthers OL Chandler Zavala carted off field, taken to hospital for neck injury
- 43 Malaysians were caught in a phone scam operation in Peru and rescued from human traffickers
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Videos of 'flash mob' thefts are everywhere, but are the incidents increasing?
Ranking
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Prime Day deals you can't miss: Amazon's October 2023 sale is (almost) here
- Georgia will take new applications for housing subsidy vouchers in 149 counties
- At least 250 killed in unprecedented Hamas attack in Israel; prime minister says country is at war
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- How long have humans been in North America? New Mexico footprints are rewriting history.
- California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoes bill aimed at limiting the price of insulin
- Students building bridges across the American divide
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Making Solar Energy as Clean as Can Be Means Fitting Square Panels Into the Circular Economy
Simone Biles finishes with four golds at 2023 Gymnastics World Championships
Gates Foundation funding $40 million effort to help develop mRNA vaccines in Africa in coming years
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
US demands condemnation of Hamas at UN meeting, but Security Council takes no immediate action
How long have humans been in North America? New Mexico footprints are rewriting history.
Food Network Star Michael Chiarello Dead at 61