
President Donald Trump said Tuesday that starting Feb. 1 he will deny federal funding to any states that are home to local governments resisting his administration’s immigration policies, expanding on previous threats to cut off resources to the so-called sanctuary cities themselves. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. Such an action could have far-reaching impacts across the U.S.
Main Idea: President Donald Trump said he will start cutting federal funds to sanctuary cities and the states that host them on Feb. 1, though courts have blocked similar efforts before.
Key Points:
California, New York, and other sanctuary states could lose federal money for schools, health care, and aid programs, raising costs and service cuts for households and taxpayers.
Supporters say the move could push more local cooperation on immigration enforcement and, if legal, may reduce fraud and crime.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central actor whose announced threat to cut federal funding to sanctuary cities and states drives the article.
Named as a major sanctuary state that could be affected by the funding threat and prior legal fights.
Federal agency cited as intending to withhold Medicaid funding from Minnesota programs.
Federal agency cited as threatening or freezing funding in a related enforcement push.
Central agency that published the sanctuary jurisdictions list referenced in the article.
Named as a sanctuary city on the Justice Department’s list discussed in the article.
Listed by the Justice Department as a sanctuary jurisdiction mentioned in the article.
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Sign in to commentNamed as a sanctuary city on the Justice Department’s list discussed in the article.
Named as a sanctuary jurisdiction on the Justice Department’s list, but only as supporting detail.
Named as a sanctuary jurisdiction on the Justice Department’s list, but only as supporting detail.