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A Greenlandic member of Denmark’s parliament has dismissed US President-elect Donald Trump’s claim that “the people of Greenland are MAGA.”
“Greenland is not MAGA. Greenland is not going to be MAGA,” Aaja Chemnitz told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Tuesday night in response to a social media post in which Trump made the claim – a reference to his slogan “Make America Great Again.”
The president-elect, who has repeatedly expressed his desire to obtain control over the autonomous Danish territory, made the remark a day before his son Donald Trump Jr. arrived in Greenland in what has been described as a “private visit.”
When asked about footage showing Trump Jr. being greeted by crowds cheering him on, some wearing MAGA hats, Chemnitz said such people were in the minority.
“I think it’s a very small minority,” said Chemnitz, who represents Greenland in the Danish parliament.
The lawmaker said that while people in Greenland might have an interest in Trump, that did not mean they want to be American citizens.
“I think the majority in Greenland, they find it quite scary, actually, and quite uncomfortable that there’s so much focus on Greenland and that the US is, actually, in a disrespectful way, showing that they would like to be buying Greenland or controlling Greenland. That is not what the population in Greenland wants,” Chemnitz said.
On Tuesday, the president-elect did not rule out the use of military force in obtaining control of the arctic island. Chemnitz said she does not take that threat seriously.
Some background: Trump previously floated the idea of purchasing Greenland from Denmark in his first term as president, but the idea was shot down by the island’s government, which said at the time that it was “not for sale.”
Panama’s sovereignty over the Panama Canal is “not negotiable,” the country’s foreign minister has insisted, following remarks by Donald Trump in which the US president-elect said he would not rule out using military force to take it over.
“The sovereignty of our canal is not negotiable … Our canal has the mission of serving humanity and its commerce. That’s one of the great values we offer the world: Guaranteeing the international community of not taking part in any conflict. The only hands that control the canal are Panamanian and it will remain that way,” Javier Martínez-Acha told a news conference Tuesday when asked about the remarks.
He added that no member of the Panamanian government has had formal or informal contact with Trump or his representatives.
“We make our decisions when the president-elect becomes president,” he said.
Some context: During remarks on Tuesday, Trump did not rule out using the military to wrest control of the Panama Canal and Greenland. His apparent openness to using the military to achieve those goals comes despite his promises to avoid wars once he is sworn in.
“I’m not going to start a war,” Trump said during his victory speech after winning the 2024 election. “I’m going to stop wars.”
Since his election, Trump has repeatedly raised his interest in acquiring both the Panama Canal and Greenland. His remarks on Tuesday were the first time he has suggested using the military to do so.
The Senate Homeland Security Committee’s confirmation hearing for South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for Department of Homeland Security secretary, is scheduled for January 15, according to the committee.
Noem has been tapped to take over the agency as two key immigration hardliners — Stephen Miller and Tom Homan — are slated to serve in senior roles, signaling Trump is serious about his promise to crack down on his immigration pledges. With his selection of Noem, Trump is ensuring a loyalist will head an agency he prioritizes and that is key to his domestic agenda.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he had a “fulsome discussion” with Speaker Mike Johnson on Tuesday about their strategy to pass key pieces of President-elect Donald Trump’s agenda, though he joked “it’s as clear as mud.”
“We had a good, fulsome discussion about all the calendar and schedule things we need to get done. And obviously our objective is to work together and make sure we keep everybody going in the same direction,” Thune said.
“I think that — I feel really good about that. We’ll see, now that obviously we’re looking forward to hearing from the president tomorrow. He has a lot to say about all of this,” he continued.
Asked if he was resigned to the single-bill strategy, Thune replied, “whatever it takes to get the job done.”
The meeting between the two top Republicans comes ahead of Trump’s scheduled meeting with GOP senators on Wednesday.
Other bills: Before the Senate adjourned Tuesday, Thune took steps to advance two politically charged pieces of legislation.
One is a bill that would effectively ban transgender athletes from women’s sports, and the other is a bill that sanctions the International Criminal Court over the arrest warrants they issued against Israeli officials.
It’s unclear whether either would get 60 votes.
House Republicans re-issued subpoenas related to special counsel Robert Hur’s investigation into President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents and two Justice Department tax investigators who worked on the Hunter Biden case on Monday, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN.
Those subpoenas would renew pursuits by the previous Congress that have been fought over in court — and not resolved — for months.
The renewed subpoenas will be received by Trump’s Justice Department, which is expected to be much friendlier to congressional Republicans seeking documents and information.
One subpoena relates to Hur’s audio recordings of interviews between President Joe Biden and his ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer, when they talked about classified information for the Biden memoir after Biden’s VP term. There are a few pursuits of this in court, including from the right-wing Heritage Foundation and from media outlets including CNN pursuing the release of these and other recordings obtained by Hur. The DOJ has repeatedly argued to judges these types of audio recordings shouldn’t be made public.
The subpoenas to the DOJ tax investigators, Mark Daly and Jack Morgan, would be renewals from prior House Judiciary Committee subpoenas. The testimony wasn’t given, and the House sued DOJ for not letting the men show up for depositions about the Biden investigation. The court case here is on hold and before Judge Ana Reyes in the DC District Court.
An attorney for Daly declined to comment on Tuesday, and Morgan’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment.
And even before the start of their new majority, House Republicans signaled they may pursue investigations targeting special counsel Jack Smith over his two criminal cases against Trump and special counsel David Weiss over his handling of the tax and gun prosecutions of Hunter Biden.
President-elect Donald Trump made numerous false claims during a wide-ranging news conference Tuesday in Florida, many of them related to foreign affairs and international trade. Here is a fact check of some of these claims.
Guns on January 6
Trump repeated his long-debunked claim that none of the rioters at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, were armed with a gun, saying that even if rioters had been charged with insurrection, “this would be the only insurrection in history where people went in as insurrectionists with not one gun…And let me tell you, the people that you’re talking about have a lot of guns in their home for hunting and for shooting and for entertainment. A lot, of lot of good reasons. But there wasn’t one gun that they found.”
Facts First: Trump’s claim is false. Multiple people who illegally entered Capitol grounds during the January 6 riot were armed with guns, plus a wide variety of other weapons.
We may never get a complete inventory of the concealed guns the rioters possessed on January 6, since nearly all of the rioters were able to leave the Capitol without being detained and searched. But it has been proven in court that at least some of the people who illegally entered Capitol grounds had guns.
Trade with the European Union
Trump repeated a false claim he has repeatedly made about European countries and trade: “They don’t take our cars, they don’t take our farm products, they don’t take anything.” He also said, “European Union: We have a trade deficit of $350 billion.”
Facts First: None of this is true.
It’s not true that the European Union doesn’t “take anything” from the US. The US exported about $368 billion in goods to the European Union in 2023 (while importing about $576 billion from the EU that year), US federal figures show.
Trump exaggerated the US trade deficit with the European Union when he said it was “$350 billion.” Even counting only trade in goods, and ignoring the services trade at which the US excels, the nominal (non-inflation-adjusted) deficit was about $209 billion in 2023. While it was on track to be tens of billions higher in 2024, for which complete data is not yet available, it is expected to be well under $300 billion.
Read more of our fact check on Trump’s remarks.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday ruled out any chance that Canada would become part of the US, pushing back against the suggestion that President-elect Donald Trump has repeatedly made in recent weeks.
“There isn’t a snowball’s chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States.
“Workers and communities in both our countries benefit from being each other’s biggest trading and security partner,” Trudeau posted on X Tuesday.
Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly echoed Trudeau’s sentiments, saying, “President-elect Trump’s comments show a complete lack of understanding of what makes Canada a strong country. Our economy is strong. … We will never back down in the face of threats.”
Some context: The post came after a news conference in which Trump ruled out using the US military against Canada to get his way, but suggested he was willing to use “economic force.”
Trump also posted on Truth Social on Monday, “Many people in Canada LOVE being the 51st State. The United States can no longer suffer the massive Trade Deficits and Subsidies that Canada needs to stay afloat. Justin Trudeau knew this, and resigned. If Canada merged with the U.S., there would be no Tariffs, taxes would go way down, and they would be TOTALLY SECURE from the threat of the Russian and Chinese Ships that are constantly surrounding them. Together, what a great Nation it would be!!!”
During the news conference, Trump criticized Canada for allegedly allowing migrants and drugs to cross US borders and repeated his threat to impose tariffs on Canadian goods.
“We’re going to put very serious tariffs on Mexico and Canada, because Canada, they come through Canada too, and the drugs that are coming through are at record numbers, record numbers,” he said.
Trudeau’s social media post came a day after he announced his resignation.
Vice President Kamala Harris will conclude her term with a swing of global travel across military installations in her final week in office, her office said Tuesday.
Harris will travel to Singapore, followed by Bahrain, and then conclude her travels in Germany as part of a multi-day trip from January 13 to January 17.
In Singapore, the vice president will meet with the country’s leaders and visit Changi Naval Base. While in Bahrain, she will meet with leaders in Manama, Bahrain and visit the headquarters of US Naval Forces Central Command and the US 5th fleet. She will end her trip by traveling to Spangdahlem, Germany to visit the U.S. Air Force 52nd Fighter Wing.
“Throughout her trip, the Vice President will discuss the accomplishments of the Biden-Harris Administration over the past four years in each region, the U.S. partnership with the respective nations, the contributions of U.S. military forces to regional and global security, and the enduring national security interests of the United States. Throughout her events at U.S. military installations, the Vice President will also engage with U.S. servicemembers,” spokesperson Ernesto Apreza said in a written statement announcing the travel.
Second gentleman Douglas Emhoff will join Harris on the trip.
Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley said the confirmation hearing for President-elect Donald Trump’s attorney general pick Pam Bondi “may be delayed a week” from his desired start date of January 14.
Grassley said the committee considered moving up a hearing for Trump’s pick for FBI director, Kash Patel, but it appears they were unable to make that happen.
“News I got this morning is it may be delayed a week, because a B-I (background investigation), and then there’s some sort of ethics report we have to have. And last week, we were thinking, if we couldn’t get Pam Bondi, could we move Patel ahead, but it looks like all of this is a little bit different than what we thought. So, it just seems like it sets us back one week,” Grassley said.
Asked by CNN’s Manu Raju about the Patel hearing, Grassley said the plan was to have Patel last.
“I never thought about that until last week if we could move that up, but we were planning on Bondi, the deputy, and then Patel. But whenever we get the papers, we will move just as fast as we can, because I want to move these nominations along as fast as we can.”
“We can’t diddle around like we did in 2017,” he added.
Grassley’s explanation for the delay was “people not understanding how the Senate works and what we have to have.”
Asked why it was taking so long for the FBI to get the report, Grassley said, “I think they were late signing the things with the outgoing administration on transition. I mean, there were certain agreements that need be signed. I don’t even know what those agreements are, but certain agreements had to be signed.”
Steve Witkoff, President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming special envoy to the Middle East, told reporters on Tuesday he is working alongside Biden administration officials during peace talks between Israel and Hamas, and he hopes to get a temporary 42-day ceasefire deal enacted before Trump’s inauguration later this month.
Witkoff, who spoke briefly at a news conference held by Trump at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida on Tuesday, told reporters off-camera that the Biden administration’s negotiating team, led by White House Middle East coordinator Brett McGurk, is the “tip of the spear” of the US role in the hostage and ceasefire negotiations taking place in Qatar, “but they want us included.”
“We’re just very collaborative together,” he added later. “No one has pride of authorship. We are totally outcome-oriented. Let’s get them home.”
Asked whether Trump taking office will catalyze a different outcome in the talks between Israel and Hamas, Witkoff praised Trump’s rhetoric around the talks while also complimenting efforts from President Joe Biden team’s thus far.
“I just think that President Trump’s persona is such that he’s driving the narrative on this negotiation,” he said. “And this is no disrespect to President Biden, he’s got a solid team, and I appreciate it that they’re allowing us to be collaborative.”
Witkoff also said he’s hoping a 42-day temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas can go into effect before Trump’s inauguration on January 20.
Witkoff reiterated that he plans to travel to Qatar in the coming days alongside McGurk as the US continues facilitating negotiations.
During Tuesday’s news conference, Trump warned “all hell will break out” if hostages being held in Gaza by Hamas are not released by the time he’s inaugurated.
The Hostage Families Forum also welcomed Trump’s “unwavering commitment” to secure the release of their loved ones. The families urged all parties to secure a deal before the inauguration.
Lauren Izso contributed to this report.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said the debate over one or two policy bills to enact President-elect Donald Trump’s agenda is “not a big issue,” telling reporters that Republicans would “figure it out.”
“There are different calculations in the Senate and the House. We have a lot more members and a lot more different interests in the various districts across the country, so a lot more for us to evaluate and calculate and that is instructive in terms of the sequence of the play calls. So, we’re not in disagreement on the components of reconciliation. It’s just about the timing and the sequence,” Johnson said.
“We’re going to get everybody together. … It’s not a big issue really. We’re going to figure it out,” he said.
As Trump is expected to meet with various groups of Republicans this weekend in Mar-a-Lago, Johnson said it’s “just to talk about our priorities and get everybody together and celebrate the win.”
“He wanted to invite all Republicans and spouses to Mar-a-Lago sometime in the next few weeks, but we’re all limited by the calendar and our obligations here, so he’s trying to accommodate as many members as he can, and his intention is to involve everybody,” Johnson said.
Asked if he’ll have a formal meeting with Trump tomorrow, Johnson said, “No, but the open invitation is here all the time. I communicate with his team, as recently as this morning, about that. He’s got a jam-packed schedule.”
A New York appeals court judge has rejected President-elect Donald Trump’s request to postpone his Friday sentencing in the hush money case.
Associate Justice Ellen Gesmer swiftly denied Trump’s request following a brief hearing on the matter Tuesday afternoon.
Trump on Tuesday asked to stay the proceedings in the hush money case — including his sentencing scheduled for Friday — while he appeals his conviction, after Judge Juan Merchan, the trial judge, rejected his demand to stop the sentencing.
Trump’s attorney Todd Blanche — the president-elect’s pick to be deputy attorney general in his new administration — argued Tuesday to the New York Appellate Division, First Department, that it should stop Trump’s sentencing, acknowledging the situation was unprecedented.
Blanche said the Supreme Court’s July decision on presidential immunity offers Trump constitutional protection. Though Merchan had denied two arguments to vacate Trump’s conviction, Blanche argued that either of those arguments should allow them a stay of proceedings while the appeal gets litigated.
Gesmer, who presided over the hearing, asked Blanche whether there’s any precedent for his request that presidential immunity could extend to a president-elect.
“There has never been a case like this before, so no,” Blanche responded.
Manhattan District Attorney’s Office Chief of Appeals Steven Wu argued Trump’s lawyers have not put forward any argument that a one-hour sentencing hearing would disrupt Trump’s responsibilities as president-elect, saying, “the sentencing has to happen at some point, right?”
Some background: Trump is appealing his conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records, arguing it should be tossed because of the Supreme Court’s presidential immunity ruling and because Trump is now president-elect.
Merchan has rejected both of those arguments, scheduling the sentencing for Friday and prompting Trump’s attorneys to go to the appeals court to try to halt the sentencing. However, Merchan signaled he would not sentence Trump to any punishment.
Read more about Trump’s appeal and the judge’s rejection.
The House voted on Tuesday to pass a GOP-led bill to require detention of undocumented migrants charged with certain crimes. A significant number of Democrats voted for the bill, but the measure still faces an uncertain future in the Senate in a sign of the challenges facing Republicans despite controlling both chambers of Congress.
The vote was 264 to 159, with 48 Democrats voting with Republicans in support. When the legislation passed the House in the last session Congress, 37 Democrats voted with Republicans.
The decision by House Republicans to bring up the legislation, known as the “Laken Riley Act,” as the first bill of the new Congress highlights the central priority of the issue for the party. But the narrow margins in both chambers limit what Republicans will be able to achieve, and it’s not clear if the bill will have the votes needed in the Senate, which is on track to take up the measure on Friday.
A critical mass of Democrats would have to join with Republicans to clear the 60-vote threshold required to advance most legislation in the chamber, a major constraint on the GOP Senate majority and incoming President Donald Trump’s agenda.
The bill would require the detention of undocumented migrants charged with theft or burglary. The legislation is named after a Georgia student who was killed last year while she was out for a run. An undocumented migrant from Venezuela was convicted and sentenced to life without parole in the case that reignited a national debate over immigration and crime.
Read more about the bill’s chances in the Senate here.
President-elect Donald Trump gave remarks and took questions from reporters in Mar-a-Lago, a day after Congress certified his 2024 presidential election win.
As Trump prepares to be sworn into office on January 20, he discussed a variety of topics on Tuesday.
Here are some of the key lines you might have missed:
- Legal issues: Trump railed against the “weaponization of justice” by Democrats and attacked special counsel Jack Smith, calling him a “deranged individual.” He also criticized Judge Juan Merchan and his handling of the hush money case and praised Judge Aileen Cannon’s decision to block the public release of Smith’s final report on his investigations into Trump.
- Offshore drilling: He again promised to try to undo the action that President Joe Biden took to permanently ban future offshore oil and gas development in parts of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, saying that it would be “done immediately.”
- Passing his agenda: Looking ahead to passing his agenda, Trump said he wants one bill, but is open to priorities being split among different legislation if it speeds up the process. He warned that lowering prices, as he promised on the campaign trail, would be “very hard,” but asserted that he would accomplish “drastic price reductions.”
- Panama Canal and Greenland: Ahead of former President Jimmy Carter’s funeral later this week, Trump repeated his criticism of Carter’s decision to hand control of the Panama Canal back over to Panama. Further, Trump did not rule out using the military to wrest control of the Panama Canal and Greenland — both territories Trump has raised interest in acquiring.
- Renaming the Gulf of Mexico: He said he wants to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America” and reiterated his call for Mexico to help stop illegal immigration across the US-Mexico border and his pledge to impose tariffs on Mexico.
- Canada’s prime minister: In the wake of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s resignation on Monday, Trump said he encouraged Wayne Gretzky, a former NHL player and coach, to run for the job.
- Wars in Ukraine and Gaza: Trump said Russia’s war in Ukraine could “escalate” and that it is “much more complicated.” Trump also warned that if hostages being held in Gaza are not released by his inauguration, “all hell will break out” in the Middle East.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing for Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for Secretary of State, is expected to be held the morning of January 15, according to the committee.
Timing for a hearing for New York Rep. Elise Stefanik, Trump’s pick for US Ambassador to the UN, is now unknown, according to a committee source. The source had earlier told CNN the hearing was expected to happen the morning of January 16.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman James Risch said he is planning confirmation hearings next week for Rubio with a goal of having him confirmed on January 20.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday that Trump’s nominees will face “some tough scrutiny” as they undergo Senate confirmation hearings.
“We need to be fair but thorough and give every nominee a chance to make their case, while also subjecting them to some tough scrutiny — that is, after all, what any reasonable job application process demands, whether you’re an average person applying for a job or somebody being nominated for a very important Cabinet position. So that’s what we Democrats intend to do,” said Schumer.
This post has been updated with additional details from a committee source.
CNN’s Ted Barrett contributed reporting.
The groups of House Republicans planning to meet with Donald Trump this weekend are going in with various objectives, but most want the president-elect to provide concrete direction as tension among different GOP factions grows over what to include in the reconciliation process and how to approach it.
Trump has various meetings scheduled starting on Friday through the weekend, including the far-right House Freedom Caucus, committee chairs, and Republicans who want to lift a tax provision that limits Americans’ ability to deduct state and local taxes on their federal returns.
Trump’s influence over House Republicans is at an all-time high — his calls to GOP Reps. Ralph Norman and Keith Self were instrumental in securing House Speaker Mike Johnson the votes to continue holding the gavel. But his mixed messaging on how to approach reconciliation, has left many Republicans at odds.
GOP Rep. Byron Donalds, who will be attending the HFC meeting on Friday night, told CNN the meeting is about opening the lines of communication ahead of Trump taking office.
Others like GOP Rep. Mike Lawler, whose New York suburban district has been hit particularly hard by the state and local tax provisions, have a more targeted objective going into the meetings with Trump.
“The objective certainly is to go in as a united front, those of us in these states, these districts that are most acutely impacted” Lawler told CNN. While House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan, a staunch Trump ally, said his approach of the meeting will be to listen.
And while these key groups are meeting in Mar-a-Lago, not all Republicans are invited.
GOP Rep. Thomas Massie, who voted against Johnson for speaker and was one of the 38 Republicans to vote against the Trump-endorsed government funding plan that included a debt ceiling hike, told CNN he will not be in the meetings.
A member of Greenland’s parliament told CNN on Tuesday that President-elect Donald Trump and his eldest son “are extremely welcome” in the autonomous Danish territory.
“Greenland’s economy needs to be diversified … So Donald Trump Junior, and even his father and other (members of the incoming) administration from the US are extremely welcome here in Greenland as visitors … and also maybe more officially in the future,” Kuno Fencker – a spokesperson for the Siumut Party, Greenland’s second largest – told CNN on Tuesday
Fencker’s comments come as the President-elect’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., posted images of himself on X in Greenland on Tuesday, just weeks after his father ruffled feathers by reiterating his desire to obtain control over the territory.
In a Truth Social post Monday, the president-elect confirmed his son would be traveling to the island along with “various representatives” to “visit some of the most magnificent areas and sights” and again expressed his interest in taking over the vast Arctic territory.
“Of course, we know about Donald Trump’s rhetoric,” Fencker continued. “We are, of course, aware of the geopolitical situation in the world, and we can see that with the Pituffik Space Base — which is a US air base in the North Greenland — should be quite important for the American security and also Canadian and Greenland … So we understand that we need to protect this island and also our allies and North America,” he said.
“We are working on creating a sovereign country, which is Greenland,” Fencker added, saying that it should be Greenlanders’ decision “on what kind of state we would like to be and also who we should cooperate with.”
House Republicans said Tuesday morning that more members are being included in the process to strategize how to pass President-elect Donald Trump’s legislative agenda, as the stakes are high for leadership to quickly advance a major bill with a narrow margin.
Nebraska GOP Rep. Don Bacon told CNN’s Manu Raju that the groups give members a chance to be involved.
“Speak up early. Get your inputs in, and don’t draw early red lines, but be involved,” he said.
He acknowledged the stakes of holding together the GOP conference with a narrow margin, saying, “with a three-seat majority, and it’ll be one seat for a couple months, it will be tough.”
New York GOP Rep. Nicole Malliotakis pointed out how the last time the House GOP was able to advance two reconciliation bills was when then-Speaker Newt Gingrich had a larger majority in 1997.
“To build consensus, everyone’s going to have to secure legislative means for their district and for the country,” she said, adding that members will prioritize different provisions, like border and energy, based on what their district needs.
“I think if we can build consensus where everybody gets something, then we can get this done. The thing is, people have to recognize they’re not going to get everything they want all the time,” she continued.
Asked if there will be a working group to address raising the debt limit, something Johnson has signaled he wants to address in a bill, Bacon said it was part of “some discussions” on Tuesday morning, but nothing “firm” had been decided.
Bacon said House Republicans hope to have their part of advancing Trump’s agenda finished by Easter in April.
President-elect Donald Trump railed against Mexico and Canada for allowing migrants to cross US borders on Tuesday, but when his administration comes in, officials will inherit a relatively quiet border, according to federal data.
“Mexico has to stop allowing millions of people to pour into our country. They can stop them. And we’re going to put very serious tariffs on Mexico and Canada, because Canada, they come through Canada too, and the drugs that are coming through are at record numbers, record numbers,” Trump said.
While the Biden administration grappled with record crossings over recent years, migrant crossings along the US-Mexico border plummeted in the wake of executive action by President Joe Biden last summer cracking down on asylum. Crossings have also dropped along the US northern border.
In November, US Border Patrol apprehended nearly 47,000 migrants along the US southern border, according to the latest available federal data. That is fewer crossings than when Trump left office in January 2021.