The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) said it hoped lower tides in the coming days would help aid the recovery.
But in the main chapter dealing with immigration, Project 2025 authors suggest dismantling the Department of Homeland Security and combining it with other immigration enforcement units in other agencies, creating a much larger and more powerful border policing operation.Other proposals include eliminating visa categories for crime and human trafficking victims, increasing fees on immigrants and allowing fast-tracked applications for migrants who pay a premium.
But it was mass deportations - not a bureaucratic shuffle, visa changes or a longer, taller border wall - that was Trump's top pitch to voters.On this issue, his administration promises to go in a slightly different direction - and potentially much further - than the Project 2025 proposals.Energy policy is a broad area of agreement between Trump and the Project 2025 proposals, summed up by one of the president's campaign slogans: "Drill, baby, drill".
The new administration wants to ramp up fossil fuel production and has taken the US out of the Paris Agreement on climate change, which seeks to limit emissions and global warming.Project 2025 proposes slashing federal money for research and investment in renewable energy, and calls for the next president to "stop the war on oil and natural gas" - ideas that the Trump campaign has enthusiastically taken up.
The document sets out two competing visions on tariffs: one suggesting boosting free trade and another pro-tariff position.
Trump has clearly sided with the latter camp, announcing import taxes targeting Canada, Mexico and China.He said: "Under Sadiq Khan, Londoners have faced a 61% increase in knife crime, a housing crisis and a 70% increase in council tax – they will rightly be furious his track record of failure is being rewarded.
"By rewarding the failing Sadiq Khan, Keir Starmer has shown once again that for Labour it is Party first, country second."The BBC has sought confirmation from the Conservative party on the source of Philp's statistics.
A petition against his award had been organised by Conservative councillor Matthew Goodwin-Freeman.Sir Sadiq said he expected Conservatives would continue to criticise him.