The Borneo Post

Four more US states sue Trump administra­tion over Dreamer program

-

LOS ANGELES: Four more US states announced Monday they are suing the Trump administra­tion over its decision to rescind a program that deferred deportatio­ns of immigrants who arrived illegally as children.

The attorneys general of California, Maine, Maryland and Minnesota filed a joint lawsuit at a federal court in northern California, following a similar decision last week by a coalition of 15 states as well as the District of Colombia that houses the capital Washington.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said the program “has allowed more than 800,000 Dreamers, children brought to this country without documentat­ion, to come out of the shadows and become successful and productive Americans.”

President Donald Trump abrogated on Tuesday an order issued in 2012 by his predecesso­r Barack Obama that had granted the migrants temporary legal status as part of The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival program (DACA).

Unless Congress passes an immigrant reform bill, the “dreamers” will in six months be forced to live in the shadows, or risk deportatio­n.

“One in four of those DACA Dreamers know California as home, and it’s no coincidenc­e that our great state is the sixth largest economy in the world,” Becerra said.

According to a study published in January by the Centre for American Progress, ending DACA could cost California as much as 11.3 billion a year, more than any other state.

The complaint noted that the decision to end the program may lead to the administra­tion reneging “on the promise it made to Dreamers and their employers that informatio­n they gave to the government for their participat­ion in the program will not be used to deport them or prosecute their employers.”

Using informatio­n provided by migrants in good faith risks violating the Fifth Amendment of the US Constituti­on, which guarantees due process, it added.

The practice also ignores the government’s legal obligation­s to analyze the effects of proposed changes to small businesses, “many of which are owned by, or employ, Dreamers,” according to the complaint.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia