The New Zealand Herald

‘Dreamers’ angry at shutdown deal

Young immigrants accuse senators of cowardice over bill

- Sharon Bernstein — Reuters

Young “Dreamers” brought to the United States illegally as children were angry and disappoint­ed yesterday after the US Congress approved a temporary spending bill to end a three-day government shutdown without a deal to shore up their shaky legal status.

US Senate Democrats accepted the bill to restore funds to keep the Government running for three more weeks in exchange for a promise by Republican­s to hold a debate on the status of the young immigrants.

“It’s irresponsi­ble of everyone in Congress not to pass something,” said Jovan Rodriguez, 27, who was brought to the US from Mexico by his parents when he was 3 years old. “I’m really disappoint­ed.” Republican President Donald Trump later signed the legislatio­n, putting government workers who were furloughed back to work.

Last year, Trump ordered an end by March to protection­s provided to the estimated 700,000 Dreamers under the 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals programme, or Daca, an executive order put in place by former Democratic President Barack Obama.

Under the programme, young people who qualified were allowed to live openly in the US, working and attending college and shielded from deportatio­n.

A court has put a temporary stay on Trump’s order.

After news of the spending bill, some Dreamers and their supporters briefly blocked the entrance to Disneyland in California. Marches and civil disobedien­ce were planned in Los Angeles, San Diego, Washington and elsewhere.

Democratic lawmakers had initially vowed to oppose any bill to The long-delayed, six-year renewal of a popular health insurance programme for children in low-income families. The programme known as Chip became an unshakeabl­e pillar for the Republican­s throughout the budget drama, and Democrats were hard-pressed to reject such a universall­y accepted plan. Delays to three taxes under the Obama-era healthcare law: the medical device tax through to 2019, the so-called Cadillac tax on generous employer-paid healthcare plans through to 2021 and a tax on health insurance companies through to 2019. New funds to toughen border security, including money to start building President Donald Trump’s long-promised wall spanning the US-Mexico border. The wall was one of his leading campaign promises, and a number of congressio­nal Republican­s have continuall­y stressed border security in the budget talks. Longer-term funding for the Government. — AP fund the Government without an agreement to restore the Daca protection­s. But Republican­s refused to budge, instead tying the spending bill to a programme favoured by Democrats that provides healthcare to poor and working-class children.

“Our members, including my brother Jonathan, are in greater danger today because of the cowardice of US senators,” activist Cristina Jimenez, executive director of group United We Dream, said in an emailed statement.

The leader of the Senate Democrats, New York Senator Chuck Schumer, said on Twitter that he believed he would have enough votes to bring a deal on Daca to the Senate floor and pass it.

Schumer said he expected Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to honour his promise to open debate on the issue. “If he does not honour our agreement, he will have breached the trust of not only the Democratic senators but the members of his own party as well.”

Activists said they planned to make their feelings known at the ballot box, targeting Republican­s who have railed against illegal immigratio­n as well as moderate Democrats who voted for yesterday’s deal.

“We will be organising voters, the people who will bring the consequenc­es,” Adrian Reyna, 26, said by telephone.

An Oakland, California, resident who was brought to the US from Mexico at age 11, Reyna said he started to work for passage of legislatio­n to protect fellow Dreamers during his student days at the University of Texas.

Any legislatio­n to protect Dreamers, even if it makes it through the Senate, could easily stall in the more conservati­ve House of Representa­tives, unless Democrats manage to win back seats in this year’s elections and exert more pressure, said Larry Sabato, a political analyst with the University of Virginia.

The headwinds scare Diego Corzo, a 27-year-old who built a successful real estate business in Texas but worries it could all be taken away.

“I will be living under a lot of stress, a lot of uncertaint­y and fear that everything that I worked so hard to accomplish can be gone,” Corzo said by telephone.

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Kurds have been burying their dead

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