U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar called for a far-reaching overhaul of the nation's handling of immigration Tuesday, including a revamp of U.S. foreign policy and involvement from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
Speaking at a forum in south Minneapolis, the freshman Democrat said the United States is "losing our moral high ground" on the issue under the Trump administration.
"What we face is not an invasion," she said, referring to the president's rhetoric on the issue. "This is not an invasion, it's an immigration crisis."
The comments followed a day of fresh turmoil for the congresswoman, whose policies and personal life have been the subject of scrutiny throughout her swift rise from state legislator to a national political figure. Earlier Tuesday, the wife of Omar's political consultant submitted a divorce filing alleging that her husband has been having an affair with the congresswoman. Omar, who declined to comment to the Star Tribune, told WCCO-TV Tuesday that she is not in a new relationship. A representative for the consultant's firm also declined to comment.
Omar did not address the allegations at the Tuesday evening forum and ignored requests for comment after the event before being whisked out a back entrance by her security staff. She focused her remarks on solving what she called a "broken system."
"We're all here tonight because we all recognize that immigration is one of the defining civil rights and human rights issue of our time," she said.
Immigration has once again emerged as one of the nation's most polarizing political issues, as Trump makes securing the southern border and deterring illegal border crossings a crux of his agenda and rhetoric heading into the 2020 election.
Democrats, meanwhile, have recoiled at the president's rhetoric and policy, criticizing recent raids conducted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), reports of squalid conditions at processing and detention centers, and a "zero-tolerance" policy at the southern border that includes separating minors from parents who face detention and deportation. Members of both parties have gone to the U.S.-Mexico border in recent months to survey conditions.