$4 billion or $5 billion that comes from here. half of the salvadorans have been here for 20 years and a third of them have a mortgage. she used the key word. temporary. it was temporary. that was the program designed. everyone knew president trump would make this move. that s part of the reason his base elected him. name only, and now. colorado senator corey gardener extending an invitation to attorney general jeff sessions to meet and discuss marijuana. it comes after sessions decision last week to resecind and obama era policy. the move is likely to pit federal law enforcement against local officials in eight states and washington, d.c. where pot is legal. gardener says no meeting with sessions has been scheduled yet.
this. christine and dave? contentious. thanks. colorado senator cory gardner inviting jeff sessions to discuss marijuana. gardener said he would block all of the president trump s judicial nominees until sessions marijuana decision is reversed. session s move likely to pit federal and local officials against. gardener says no meeting with sessions has been scheduled yet. it s a whalcohol lot if you re hungry your pizza hut delivery could roll up in a self-driving van. perfect. at 4:47 a.m. how soon could these vehicles hit the road?
co more than 200,000 citizens are el salvador could lose legal status in the next months. trump says temporary status covered by this program will end by next september. officials say it will give them time to find other legal means of staying in the u.s. or face deportation. the president of el salvador calling it an 18-month grace period. cnn s reporter has more from chill. reporter: thanks. the decision yesterday by the trump administration was widely expected but that by no means lessens the blow to these groups. what happens is there is a category called temporary protective status. in this case, a natural disaster, a series of earthquakes in 2001.
kyle whitmeyer is a columnist in alabama. he wrote this. jordan and meadows put me in the position of defending someone i disagree with 90% of the time. a rough word from someone on the other side of the aisle. it does seem as though jeff sessions is a man on an island. i ll surprised there aren t more defending him. certainly on policy as he man of great principle. i was struck with this marijuana decision. also the debate within conservative and republican ranks. there s a lot of annoyance at the justice department for this. even for the more libertarian minded, legal pot is something to embrace. that might be one person there s not as much defense of him. i challenge them.
there are more than 250,000 nationals that the department of homeland security says are covered by it temporary status in the u.s. they all must have lived in the u.s. since 2001. they ve been working. many of them had u.s. citizen children. the decision yesterday extends for 18 months a window for those individuals to make the decision now, can they find another way to stay in the u.s.? will they be able to do so in time? separate the families or take everyone back home or continue to live in the shadows. it s now punted to congress to a certain extent. the department of homeland security says, that congress should be the one to take action here. so certainly this is not perhaps the end of the saga with temporary protective stat bus b thanks for that. people in el salvador send back