COOPER: Essentially, you're saying the people who have committed crimes and not the crossing of the border, but people convicted of actual crimes, they're the ones who will make the focus, but 11 million people are no longer going to be deported under Donald Trump.

CONWAY: I am saying what he said there, which is there could be a way to figure out how to do it so to you're -- we're not here to harm people. And I think that's a very important phrase out here.

COOPER: So, deportation force, we're not going to be hearing Donald Trump talking about a deportation force for 11 million undocumented?

CONWAY: He has not said that for a while. A nd, by the way, Senator Jeff Sessions who I know —

COOPER: So, that's a change in policy?

CONWAY: A friend to CNN, I know, Senator Sessions also said, you know, you don't know — there is not a deportation force, you don't deport 11 million people, you find a way to abide by the law and see what that provides.

And I want to repeat again because I think it gets lost —

COOPER: Okay. Just to that point, Donald Trump early on said 11 million people got to leave. The good ones can come back and he talks about a deportation force. We're not going to hear that from Donald Trump. He's no longer saying 11 million undocumented immigrants in this country, illegal immigrants in this country, illegal immigrants in this country all have to leave. They're going to be removed.

CONWAY: We're going to look at what he said tonight with respect to that, and I'll repeat that because he said that he wants to, he's not flip-flopping on immigration, and he wants to find a way —