and there are people you can t? there are people we can t meet with. the demand for our services is absolutely endless. reporter: to get here. right now it is just a relief. for me. reporter: maria yvette diaz is a new u.s. citizen. swearing in with o100 others in chicago at this nationalization ceremony. i just feel safe now. a chance of safety natalia seeks. this college professor hopes it also legacies her as an american. sadly she fears among many in this country it won t. i am mexican. i am a woman. i am immigrant and there are people who will not look past that. reporter: trump has said that he welcomes immigrants who are here legally, the ones who play by the rules but those immigrants say he has been so
who can we trust today? yeah, well, i would trust the fbi. i understand that the superintendent was worried about what if the fbi was wrong. but i think you ve got to listen to the fbi when they say it s not a credible threat. don t close the cools. maybe call the local police and have them establish security perimeters around the school, maybe bring in the bomb skauds to sniff out any danger, but it s a big decision to close schools in the middle of a day in a big system like los angeles. it is and it is making national news as we are covering every second. one of the things we want to talk about today is the visa labor program. while we were digesting this threat for the l.a. school district, the president was at a nationalization ceremony where people were becoming citizens. tlas question about what our policies should be. what do you think? well, i think all the visa programs are right for review by
night, ariving on bus, they weren t taken to california but somewhere else specifically because that small town, marietta, has become a flashpoint in this debate all week. last night protesters and counter protestors squared off outside that border control facility as we ve seen in the heated debate all week. [ chanting shame on you ] reporter: meanwhile, here in the white house, while all of that goes on, nearly 3,000 miles away, the president attended a nationalization ceremony here at the white house. a powerful image watching 25 new americans be sworn in as citizens as they took their oath of allegiance, and during that ceremony, he made another pitch for immigration reform. if we want to keep attracting the best and bright freest from bekbrond our shores we have to fix or immigration system, which is broken and pass common sense
the centerpiece of the anti-immigration argument. among republicans. they re not arguing with democrats. this is an argument between republicans. it has been since 2006. ron paul, jim demint, really deep, dark stuff there persists and it s not going anywhere. and the only way to stamp it out is to shine a light on it, as you did quite expertly. and to prevail. i mean, george w. bush is going to attend a nationalization ceremony tomorrow. i was in contact with his office. and he s not trying to weigh in to the politics of this or the legislative process. he made a grander and a greater effort than anyone has in a very long time in 2005 and 2006. but i think that to line up behind marco rubio and the 13 other republicans who voted for it in the senate, to line up behind paul ryan who in the house has been extremely constructive, cares about comprehensive immigration reform, he has complete credibility with the most conservative republicans in our party and the most conservative