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Donald Trump fires Acting US Attorney General after she tells staff not to defend travel ban

Click to play video: 'Trump fires acting Attorney General Sally Yates after she wouldn’t defend his immigration order'
Trump fires acting Attorney General Sally Yates after she wouldn’t defend his immigration order
WATCH ABOVE: Acting Attorney General Sally Yates was fired on Monday evening shortly after she told her staff not to enforce the travel ban imposed by the Trump administration. Dan Scheneman reports – Jan 31, 2017

WASHINGTON – Acting Attorney General Sally Yates was fired by U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday night

“Mrs. Yates is an Obama Administration appointee who is weak on borders and very weak on illegal immigration,” a statement from the White House read before noting, “President Trump relieved Mrs. Yates of her duties.”

Dane Boente will replace Yates until Trump’s appointee for Attorney General Jeff Sessions is confirmed by the Senate.

Earlier in the day, Yates directed Justice Department attorneys not to defend Trump’s executive order on refugees.

Yates’ abrupt decision deepened the chaos surrounding Trump’s order. At least three top national security officials — Defence Secretary James Mattis, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly and Rex Tillerson, who is awaiting confirmation to lead the State Department — have told associates they were not aware of details of the directive until around the time Trump signed it.

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WATCH: Police in Columbus, Ohio used pepper spray on a crowd of anti-Trump protesters Monday evening.
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Police in Columbus use pepper spray to disperse crowd of anti-Trump protesters

Leading intelligence officials were also left largely in the dark, according to U.S. officials.

READ MORE: Donald Trump defends travel ban claiming it is not about religion

Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations committee, said that despite White House assurances that congressional leaders were consulted, he learned about the order in the media.

The fallout was immediate: Friction between Trump and his top advisers and a rush by the Pentagon to seek exemptions to the policy. The White House approach also sparked an unusually public clash between a president and the civil servants tasked with carrying out his policy.

WATCH: Senator Patrick Leahy calls Trump’s firing of Attorney General Sally Yates ‘shameful’

Click to play video: 'Senator Patrick Leahy calls Trump’s firing of Attorney General Sally Yates ‘shameful’'
Senator Patrick Leahy calls Trump’s firing of Attorney General Sally Yates ‘shameful’

A large group of American diplomats circulated a memo voicing their opposition to the order, which temporarily halted the entire U.S. refugee program and banned all entries from seven Muslim-majority nations for 90 days. In a startling combative response, White House spokesman Sean Spicer challenged those opposed to the measure to resign.

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“They should either get with the program or they can go,” Spicer said.

WATCH: Trump Administration refusing to budging on travel ban
Click to play video: 'Trump Administration refusing to budge on travel ban'
Trump Administration refusing to budge on travel ban

The blowback underscored Trump’s tenuous relationship with his own national security advisers, many of whom he met for the first time during the transition, as well as with the government bureaucracy he now leads. While Trump outlined his plan for temporarily halting entry to the U.S. from countries with terror ties during the campaign, the confusing way in which it finally was crafted stunned some who have joined his team.

WATCH: http://globalnews.ca/news/3216391/donald-trump-travel-ban-emergency-debate-mps-ottawa/

Click to play video: 'Paul Ryan defends Trump travel ban, admits rollout was ‘confusing, regrettable’'
Paul Ryan defends Trump travel ban, admits rollout was ‘confusing, regrettable’

Mattis, who stood next to Trump during Friday’s signing ceremony, is said to be particularly incensed. A senior U.S. official said Mattis, along with Joint Chiefs Chairman Joseph Dunford, was aware of the general concept of Trump’s order but not the details. Tillerson has told the president’s political advisers that he was baffled over not being consulted on the substance of the order.

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READ MORE: Donald Trump: US will resume issuing visas to all countries over next 90 days

U.S. officials and others with knowledge of the Cabinet’s thinking insisted on anonymity in order to disclose the officials’ private views.

Trump’s order pauses America’s entire refugee program for four months and indefinitely bans all those from war-ravaged Syria. Critics dispute the president’s assertion that the policy is needed to keep Americans safe, noting that recent acts of extremist violence have been carried out either by U.S. citizens or by individuals whose families weren’t from the nations singled out in the order.

WATCH: PM Trudeau renews opposition to Trump travel ban

Click to play video: 'PM Trudeau renews opposition to Trump travel ban'
PM Trudeau renews opposition to Trump travel ban

The president has privately acknowledged flaws in the rollout, according to a person with knowledge of his thinking. But he’s also blamed the media – his frequent target – for what he believes are reports exaggerating the dissent and the number of people actually affected.

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Trump has also said he believes the voters who carried him to victory support the plan as a necessary step to safeguard the nation. And he’s dismissed objectors as attention-seeking rabble-rousers and grandstanding politicians.

After a chaotic weekend during which some U.S. legal permanent residents were detained at airports, some agencies were moving swiftly to try to clean up after the White House.

Homeland Security, the agency tasked with implementing much of the refugee ban, clarified that customs and border agents should allow legal residents to enter the country. The Pentagon was trying to exempt Iraqis who worked alongside the U.S. and coalition forces from the 90-day ban on entry from the predominantly Muslim countries.

WATCH: Markets fall after Trump travel curbs

Click to play video: 'Markets fall after Trump travel curbs'
Markets fall after Trump travel curbs

“There are a number of people in Iraq who have worked for us in a partnership role, whether fighting alongside us or working as translators, often doing so at great peril to themselves,” said Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman.

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Policies with such broad reach are typically vetted by affected agencies and subject to review by multiple agencies. It’s a process that can be frustratingly slow but is aimed at avoiding unintended consequences.

READ MORE: Tens of thousands take to streets of US cities to protest Trump travel ban

On Capitol Hill, lawmakers in Trump’s party sought to distance themselves from the wide-ranging order.

While Spicer said “appropriate committees and leadership offices” on Capitol Hill were consulted, GOP lawmakers said their offices had no hand in drafting the order and no briefings from the White House on how it would work.

“I think they know that it could have been done in a better way,” Corker said of the White House.

The executive order was largely crafted by Steve Bannon, Trump’s chief strategist, and Stephen Miller, a young policy adviser and former congressional aide to Trump’s pick for attorney general, Sen. Jeff Sessions. Spicer insisted the advisers had kept departments “in the loop at the level necessary,” but he sidestepped questions about whether Cabinet secretaries were directly involved in the process.

WATCH: Donald Trump fires Attorney General Sally Yates after she tells staff not to defend travel ban. Margaret Brennan reports.

Click to play video: 'Donald Trump fires Attorney General Sally Yates after she tells staff not to defend travel ban'
Donald Trump fires Attorney General Sally Yates after she tells staff not to defend travel ban

Some Trump supporters defended the president, saying his actions should not have come as a surprise given his positions during the campaign.

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“Nothing he did over the weekend was new,” said Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker and an informal adviser. He conceded that co-ordination could have been better, but he said Trump’s vow to quickly bring change to Washington will sometimes mean he needs to prioritize fast action over broad consultation.

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