
- Staff from government efficiency departments can access immigration databases.
- Officials work on the HUD, and the rule will prohibit families of mixed races.
- The White House moved its back and said it shared data to find immigrants and deleted it.
Donald Trump’s administration is using personal data that is often protected by the spread to find undocumented immigrants who they work, study and live in, often in order to evacuate them from their housing and labor. Detroit News.
According to reports independent.
It’s all about determining undocumented immigration and assisting Trump’s massive deportation agenda.
In agencies such as the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Social Security Bureau and the IRS, these databases contain private information that immigrants of all status have submitted information about themselves and believe that this information will not be used on them.
Officials are working on a HUD to create a rule that would ban mixed-race families or people with different immigrants or citizenship status from employees who have access to public housing and who do not want to be named.
Led by Elon Musk, Doge is combing through HUD data to identify undocumented immigrants and then sharing that data with the Department of Homeland Security to prevent people from gaining public interest.
This can be done even if they live with people with legal status.
The push is up to date in a series of actions that use government data to help executives priorities.
However, legal experts say the move violates privacy rules and may declare distrust of the government.
“It’s not only about one subgroup of people, it’s really about all of us,” Tanya Broder, senior counsel for health and economic justice policy at the National Immigration Law Centre told the postal. “Everyone cares about their privacy. No one wants their healthcare information or tax information broadcasts and has ever followed us.”
However, the White House has supported the moves, saying that data is shared to find immigrants and delete them.
“The sharing of information across agencies is for determining who in our country, including violent criminals, identifying which public safety and terrorist threats may exist, approving these people from voters, and identifying the public interest used by these foreigners under taxpayer fees,” the Secretary of Homeland Security told the Secretary of Public Affairs. ” postal.
“U.S. taxes should be used to the interests of U.S. citizens, especially when it comes to issues like the housing crisis in our country,” HUD Secretary Scott Turner said in a statement. “This new agreement will leverage resources, including technology and personnel, to ensure that the American people are the only priority in public housing.”
IRS officials have agreed to share specific tax information related to undocumented immigration. The agency can use this information to locate millions of people living illegally.
Suppress protesters
The government’s investigation into whether anti-Semitism allegations were correctly handled by the government in February.
According to documents from the Civil Rights Office and three lawyers, the Ministry of Education’s political appointment told the lawyers to handle the case, requiring schools to ask the names and nationalities of protesters to oppose Israel’s war in Gaza.
When asked why the department sought data about protesters and data related to immigration, Craig Trainer, acting assistant deputy secretary of the Ministry of Education, said the information was necessary to assess how universities handle anti-Semitism cases.
His statement did not directly address the deportation issue.