IQNA

After Visit to Mosque, Romney Says He Supports Trump's Travel Ban

12:21 - October 27, 2018
News ID: 3467081
TEHRAN (IQNA) – Standing in his stocking feet, US Republican Senate candidate Mitt Romney spoke and answered questions at the Utah Islamic Center on Friday before attending a worship service with about 200 Muslims.

 

Romney fielded questions on guns, immigration and health care, but interestingly no one asked him about President Donald Trump's order to restrict travel from several majority Muslims countries, which the president referred to as a "Muslim ban" during the 2016 election.

Asked outside the Sandy mosque afterward, Romney said he backs the travel restriction.

"I want to see what the results are for the effort to date but based on the analysis which was described by the president, I do support it," he said.

Romney made it clear that he doesn't believe people should be banned from the U.S. based on religion.

"In the campaign the president spoke about a Muslim ban, which I think was interpreted as preventing all Muslims from coming into the country. After he became president, he looked instead not to prevent people coming into the country based on religion but instead based on whether their nations had procedures to determine if someone could represent a risk or not," Romney said.

The US Supreme Court in June upheld travel restrictions on Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela and Yemen. Romney said he believes it will continue to pass constitutional muster.

Trump has the right under the Constitution to safeguard the nation, Romney said.   

"I think the president has a responsibility to protect the country, and the determination made by him and by his administration was that certain countries could not assure that the people were being properly vetted and therefore not allowed to come into the country," he said.

Romney's opponent, Democratic Salt Lake County Councilwoman Jenny Wilson, said she spoke against the travel ban and the council passed a resolution in opposition "the minute it was put in place."

The January 2017 resolution called on the federal government to rescind the president’s executive order and affirmed support for refugees in Salt Lake County.

"It was a very sensitive time in the community, and I'm not sure Mitt Romney understands that. He wasn't an elected official, he still isn't. He wasn't directly engaged as we looked at the challenge that it puts with this community," she said.

Wilson said it's another distinct difference between herself and Romney.

 

Source: deseretnews.com

Tags: iqna ، muslim ، mosque ، travel ban ، Romney ، trump
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