The Borneo Post

Anger as Trump ends amnesty for 800,000 young immigrants

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This is the only country I know. My future is here. I’m not going to go without a fight.

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Tuesday ended an amnesty for 800,000 people brought illegally to the United States as minors, throwing their future in serious doubt and triggering fierce condemnati­on from across the political spectrum.

Business leaders, unions, religious groups, opposition Democrats and many within Trump’s own Republican party joined forces to criticize the phased end of protection­s for people who arrived in the United States under the age of 16.

So- called ‘ Dreamers’ — many Hispanic, now in their twenties — will have somewhere between six and around 24 months before they become illegal and subject to potential deportatio­n.

“This is the only country I know,” said Ivan Ceja, a 26-yearold computer science student and immigrant rights advocate who arrived in the country as a baby.

“My future is here. I’m not going to go without a fight.” Trump later insisted he had ‘great heart for the folks we are talking about, a great love for them’ and called on Congress to pass wide-ranging immigratio­n reform — something lawmakers have tried and failed to do for decades.

The president vowed to ‘revisit’ the issue if Congress fails.

“I look forward to working w/ D’s+ R’s in Congress to address immigratio­n reform in a way that puts hardworkin­g citizens of our country 1st,” he tweeted.

Trump had argued that the amnesty introduced by Barack Obama in 2012 was an unconstitu­tional overreach of presidenti­al powers and would likely be struck down by the courts eventually.

The announceme­nt prompted ex-president Obama to make a rare re- entry onto the political stage to decry the decision as ‘wrong,’ ‘self-defeating’ and ‘cruel.’

“Let’s be clear: the action taken today isn’t required legally. It’s a political decision, and a moral question,” Obama said.

Republican Senator John McCain, who lost the 2008 presidenti­al election to Obama, said that while he disagreed with his ex-rival’s use of an executive order to set the policy, reversing it now would be ‘unacceptab­le.’

He vowed to work with both Democrats and Republican­s to craft and pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.

Around 800,000 people took up the offer to get two-year renewable permits under the DACA scheme, but a similar number opted to stay in the shadows largely because of uncertaint­y over policy once Obama left office.

Trump, who ran for office on a hard-right immigratio­n and law and order platform, painted his decision as an effort to put natural-born Americans first.

Senior Department of Homeland Security officials admitted that the addresses and other sensitive informatio­n provided by current permit holders would be kept on record indefinite­ly.

But, one official said, there was ‘no plan at this time’ to specifical­ly target recipients for deportatio­n.

In New York, thousands of protesters marched in Lower Manhattan before walking across the Brooklyn Bridge.

“We’ve always been responsibl­e here, paying our taxes; we haven’t taken anyone’s job, we pay for everything out of pocket, not even getting government help or scholarshi­ps for school,” said student Adriana Perez, 33, who arrived in the city from Guerrero, Mexico, when she was 6.

Texas, which led a coalition of 10 conservati­ve states threatenin­g court action against the federal government unless DACA was rescinded, said it was dropping a 2015 lawsuit that provided the basis for its legal challenge — with Attorney General Ken Paxton claiming ‘victory.’ But elsewhere, Trump’s decision was met with broad opprobrium.

The Mexican government, mayors from across the US and the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union were among those who issued statements of condemnati­on.

The US Conference of Catholic Bishops called the decision ‘ reprehensi­ble’ and said ‘ today, our nation has done the opposite of how Scripture calls us to respond.’ Opponents hinted that they may challenge Trump’s decision in the courts.

“We warned you not to threaten our neighbors, úrealDonal­dTrump. New York City will fight to defend our Dreamers,” said New York Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Even Trump allies in business and the Republican Party voiced concern, arguing the policy would damage the economy and was not in keeping with US values.

“To reverse course now and deport these individual­s is contrary to fundamenta­l American principles and the best interests of our country,” the American Chamber of Commerce said in a statement.

Much of the business world, especially the high-tech firms of California’s Silicon Valley, stood firmly against a DACA repeal.

The program offers the equivalent of a renewable residence permit to young people who were under the age of 16 when they arrived and have no criminal record.

Top congressio­nal Republican Paul Ryan called on lawmakers to step in — although the chances of a badly divided Congress reaching a long-elusive agreement on immigratio­n reform in months appear dim.

“It is my hope that the House and Senate, with the president’s leadership, will be able to find consensus on a permanent legislativ­e solution that includes ensuring that those who have done nothing wrong can still contribute as a valued part of this great country,” Ryan said. — AFP

Ivan Ceja, computer science student and immigrant rights advocate

 ??  ?? Supporters of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme march to City Hall in Los Angeles, California. — Reuters photo
Supporters of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme march to City Hall in Los Angeles, California. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Activists from RefuseFasc­ism.org project anti-Trump administra­tion messages onto the side of the Metropolit­an Detention Center, where many undocument­ed people are jailed, in a seven city action after President Trump ordered an end to DACA in Los...
Activists from RefuseFasc­ism.org project anti-Trump administra­tion messages onto the side of the Metropolit­an Detention Center, where many undocument­ed people are jailed, in a seven city action after President Trump ordered an end to DACA in Los...
 ??  ?? A copy of Tuesday’s New York Daily News sits on the shelf of a news stand, in New York City. — AFP photo
A copy of Tuesday’s New York Daily News sits on the shelf of a news stand, in New York City. — AFP photo

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