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Trump says he doesn't know if he has to maintain the constitution

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Washington – President Donald Trump said that he does not know whether he has to maintain the US constitution as president in an interview about the “Meet the Press” from NBC when he defended his government's actions to remove people who are illegal in the country.

Trump's comments follow the Supreme Court in April that the Trump administration has the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a sheet metal in Maryland and a three -person father, who was wrongly into an El Salvador prison without having deported a legal proceedings.

“I don't know,” said Trump when he was asked by host Kristen Welker whether he had to maintain the constitution. “I have to answer by saying again that I work brilliant lawyers for myself, and they are obviously followed by what the Supreme Court said.”

The Trump government said Request the publication of Abrego Garcias from El Salvador, where it originally comes fromBecause the court formulated its decision. Democrats and other critics have argued that such statements show that the government refuses to obey the nation's highest court.

“What you said is not what I heard, what the Supreme Court said,” said Trump to Welker. “You have a different interpretation.”

Trump officials have accused Abrego Garcia of being a member of the MS-13 gang and said that if he returned to the USA, he would be returned to El Salvador because of his illegal status. Abrego Garcia denied that he was a member of MS-13 or another gang.

Press whether his administration of the fifth change in the constitution is pursued that says that nobody “life, freedom or property is withdrawn without proper law,” said Trump that he was not sure.

“I don't know. It seems – that could say that, but if you talk about it, we would have to carry out a million or 2 million or 3 million attempts,” he said. “We have thousands of people who are some murderers and some drug dealers and some of the worst people on earth.”

Trump exceeded the boundaries of the presidential power in the first three months of his second term and determined the congress for politics and argues that the President-no-district judges have the last word about national security issues.

Reach Joey Garrison on X @Joeygarrison.

Post: Aysha Bagchi

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