The Asian Age

Trump close to a deal with Democrats over protection of illegal immigrant kids

Trump close to deal with Dems on immigratio­n, conservati­ves furious

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Washington, Spet. 14: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday he and lawmakers are close to a deal on protection­s for illegal immigrants brought to the United States as children, but stressed any such deal would need to include border security measures.

The Republican President met with Democratic congressio­nal leaders on Wednesday evening to discuss the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) programme, a policy enacted by Democratic former President Barack Obama that protected socalled Dreamers from deportatio­n and allowed them to stay and work in the United States.

“I think we’re fairly close (to a deal), but we have to get massive border security,” Mr Trump told reporters at the White House on Thursday.

Mr Trump said last week he was ending the Daca program, but was allowing a six-month window to give Congress time to act on the issue. He later said he might “revisit” the matter if lawmakers do not.

To gain the support from Democrats on the Dreamers, some 800,000 mostly Hispanic young adults, Trump appeared to have decided not to tie Daca legislatio­n to funding for a wall along the southern U.S. border with Mexico.

Mr Trump made building such a wall a central piece of his 2016 election campaign, saying it would keep out illegal immigrants and drugs, but it has long been opposed by Democrats.

“The wall will come later,” Mr Trump said. “The wall is going to be built, it’s going to be funded a little bit later.”

Mr Trump has previously appeared conflicted over the fate of the Dreamers and on Thursday he indicated he did not want them deported.

“Does anybody really want to throw out good, educated and accomplish­ed young people who have jobs, some serving in the military?” Trump wrote in one of a series of posts on Twitter.

The decision to not include funding for a wall in a Daca deal angered some of Trump’s staunch supporters.

“I don’t think it’s unclear to anybody what those campaign promises were but it looks to me like he’s preparing to keep Hillary Clinton’s campaign promise rather than his own,” Iowa Republican Congressma­n Steve King said on CNN, referring to Democratic presidenti­al candidate Clinton.

After failing to notch up any major legislatio­n since taking office in January, Mr Trump has increasing­ly expressed frustratio­n with his fellow Republican­s who control both chambers of Congress. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and House of Representa­tives minority leader Nancy Pelosi said in a statement they came to an agreement with Mr Trump about Daca.

When we’re talking about this legislatio­n to protect the Dreamers. Yes, I do trust that the President is sincere in understand­ing that the public supports that overwhelmi­ngly

— Nancy Pelosi, House Minority leader

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 ?? — AFP ?? House minority leader Nancy Pelosi during a press conference at the US Capitol on Thursday.
— AFP House minority leader Nancy Pelosi during a press conference at the US Capitol on Thursday.

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