The Phnom Penh Post

Congress takes up ‘Dreamers’

- Michael Mathes and Paul Handley

THE citizenshi­p hopes of 1.8 million immigrants brought to the United States as children hung in the balance on Monday as Congress launched debate on the hot-button issue, with President Donald Trump eager to “make a deal” on new legislatio­n.

In offering a path to citizenshi­p for so-called Dreamers, Trump has exceeded the demands of opposition Democrats – but only in exchange for tough cutbacks on overall immigratio­n and funding for a massive wall on the Mexican border.

Trump’s proposal was front and centre as senators began an unpredicta­ble course that could yield a long-sought breakthrou­gh on immigratio­n or end in failure – with hundreds of thousands of immigrants at risk of losing their legal protection­s early next month.

“I hope to be able to make a deal,” Trump said, adding that the Republican Party would “love” to reach an agreement. “If the Democrats want to make a deal, it’s really up to them.”

‘Threading a needle’

On Monday, the Senate voted to advance toward a full and open floor debate on immigratio­n, one that could take weeks.

Trump himself is expected to play an influentia­l – but perhaps destabilis­ing – role in the process. His U-turns on some aspects of the sensitive issue have unsettled Democrats and some Republican­s.

Meanwhile, a group of conservati­ve senators introduced legislatio­n that closely follows the proposals Trump made in January, and it got an endorsemen­t from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

The Secure and Succeed Act offers a 10- to 12-year path to citizenshi­p for Dreamers. But it also ends the popular diversity lottery system and sharply limits family-based immigratio­n.

It also allocates $25 billion for tighter border security, including constructi­on of a wall along the US-Mexico border that Trump promised during his 2016 election campaign.

“This is the only bill that has a chance of becoming law, and that’s because it’s the only bill that will truly solve the underlying problem,” said Senator Tom Cotton, a lead sponsor of the legislatio­n. Cotton also suggested Trump was done negotiat- ing. “The president’s framework is not an opening bid in negotiatio­ns. It is a best and final offer,” he told reporters.

The Senate’s turn to immigratio­n began as the White House unveiled Trump’s 2019 budget framework, which asks for increases in funding to secure “porous borders”, including for additional agents, detention centers and high-tech equipment such as drones.

Several Democrats have said Trump’s plan is dead on arrival because it would so dramatical­ly curb legal immigratio­n.

Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said it was time for a “narrow” solution for Dreamers and border security that does not overhaul broader immigratio­n policy. “Democrats and Re- publicans are working hard to find a bill to protect the Dreamers and provide border security that will garnish 60 votes,” he said, referring to the threshold for advancing legislatio­n in the 100-member chamber.

“No easy task,” he added. “It’s like threading a needle.”

McConnell, for his part, has pledged to oversee a process by which both sides can introduce amendments. He agreed to the open-ended floor action – rare in a Congress gripped by partisansh­ip – after Democrats voted to help end a three-day shutdown last month that was a result of immigratio­n disputes.

‘Common Sense’ coalition

With the fate of Dreamers in limbo, a bipartisan group of about 25 senators known as the “Common Sense Coalition” is working on compromise legislatio­n.

The clock is ticking: many of the 690,000 Dreamers who are registered under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program could begin losing protection­s from expulsion early next month.

Trump scrapped the scheme in September and gave Congress six months to craft a permanent fix. The program’s March 5 expiration date is not set in stone, however. A San Francisco judge’s injunction has at least temporaril­y blocked removal of DACA protection­s ordered by Trump.

Cotton’s bill could meet stiff resistance.

Democrats and some Republican­s have opposed Trump’s hardline stance, especially the restrictio­n of family-based immigratio­n to spouses and children, and massive funding for the border wall.

Trump’s Democratic opponents had originally pushed only for a permanent solution for the DACA registrant­s, in separate legislatio­n.

By expanding the promise of citizenshi­p to all DACA-eligible young immigrants – and tying it to immigratio­n cutbacks – Trump has put the Democrats in a corner.

The president has blamed domestic terror attacks and violent crime on beneficiar­ies of the visa lottery and familybase­d “chain migration”.

Should an immigratio­n compromise pass the Senate, its fate in the House would remain unclear, in part because some conservati­ves oppose legalising undocument­ed migrants.

 ?? MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? So-called ‘Dreamers’ protest at the Senate side of the US Capitol to urge Congress in passing the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, on December 6, in Washington.
MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES/AFP So-called ‘Dreamers’ protest at the Senate side of the US Capitol to urge Congress in passing the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, on December 6, in Washington.

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