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Trump says he is not sure whether people in the United States have the right to due process rights

President Donald Trump said he is not sure whether the U.S. people have the right to guarantee proper procedural rights in the U.S. Constitution, as his administration actively promotes the illegal and other non-citizen deportations.

Trump commented on Sunday at NBC interview Meet Kristen Welker. Welk asked Trump whether he agreed with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who said last month that “of course” everyone in the United States has the right to due process, which usually requires the government to provide notices and hearings before taking certain adverse legal proceedings before taking certain adverse legal proceedings.

“I don't know. I'm not, I'm not a lawyer. I don't know.

Trump added that his lawyers “apparently will follow what the Supreme Court said.”

On April 19, a judicial judge of the U.S. Supreme Court temporarily banned the Trump administration from deporting a group of Venezuelan immigrants who were alleged to be members of the gang. The government that invokes rarely used wartime laws has urged judges to raise or narrow down their orders.

People who were wrongly deported stayed in El Salvador

U.S. Deputy Attorney General D. John Sauer said in a filing with the Supreme Court that the detainees are receiving notices of their dismissal and have “enough time” to file a judicial review claim.

The justices also directed the Trump administration on April 10 to promote the administration's recognition of the return of the El Salvador man who was expelled from El Salvador.

Kilmar Abrego Garcia stayed in a detention center in El Salvador. The federal judge who chaired the case ordered the Trump administration to provide additional information on what steps to ensure the man returns.

Trump said in an NBC interview that pursuing a third presidency is “not what I want to do.”

“It's something I don't allow, as far as I know,” Trump said, occasionally suggesting that he wants to run his third term.

Part of the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is: “No one shall be elected to the President's Office more than twice.”

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