The Star Malaysia

Trump to cast out ‘Dreamers’

US president seeks to end young immigrant protection programme

-

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has decided to end a popular programme that shields hundreds of thousands of young undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n, while deferring its enforcemen­t for six months, Politico reported.

The online news outlet said the plan would give Congress, where many in his own party support the so-called “Dreamers” programme, time to come up with a replacemen­t before the grace period expires.

Trump was scheduled to announce his decision on Tuesday, but Politico said he had already made up his mind and White House aides had met Sunday to plan the rollout.

The New York Times also reported that Trump was strongly considerin­g ending the programme after a six-month delay, but said officials cautioned that he could still change his mind.

Known as DACA for “Deferred Action on Childhood Arrivals”, the programme was put into effect in 2012 by president Barack Obama, allowing an estimated 800,000 undocument­ed immigrants to stay in the country for renewable two- year periods to study or work if they had come to the United States before age 16.

Trump, whose anti-immigrant rhetoric helped propel him to the White House, made ending the programme a top campaign promise, although once in office he appeared to soften his stance.

Politico said Attorney General Jeff Sessions persuaded Trump to kick the programme to Congress, arguing that the legislatur­e – not the executive – was responsibl­e for writing immigratio­n law.

Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, have defended the programme.

“These are kids who know no other country, who were brought here by their parents and don’t know another home,” Ryan said in a radio interview on Friday.

“And so I really do believe there needs to be a legislativ­e solution.”

In a letter to the White House and top Republican­s and Democrats in Congress, business leaders – including executives at Cisco, eBay, Facebook, Marriott and Microsoft -warned of the moral and economic impact of dismantlin­g the programme. — AFP

 ??  ?? Fighting to stay: Jessica Colotl, posing in front of a statue of Richard B. Russell Jr in the Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, DC. Colotl rose as the US’ most prominent ‘Dreamer’ seven years ago when she became central to the debate on...
Fighting to stay: Jessica Colotl, posing in front of a statue of Richard B. Russell Jr in the Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, DC. Colotl rose as the US’ most prominent ‘Dreamer’ seven years ago when she became central to the debate on...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia