Waikato Times

Trump pushes immigratio­n compromise

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UNITED STATES: President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n proposal to Congress will include a path to citizenshi­p for an estimated 1.8 million young undocument­ed immigrants, White House officials said yesterday, more than twice the number of ‘‘dreamers’’ who were enrolled in a deferred action programme Trump terminated last fall.

The figure represents a significan­t concession to Democrats but is likely to produce sharp blowback among conservati­ve Republican­s, even as the White House cast the move as one piece of an immigratio­n framework that would significan­tly tighten border control laws.

Trump’s plan, which will be formally sent to the Senate on Tuesday, also includes a $25 billion ‘‘trust fund’’ for a border wall and additional security upgrades on both the southwest and northern US borders.

And the president will propose significan­t curbs to legal immigratio­n channels, restrictin­g the ability of US citizens to petition for visas only for spouses and minor children and ending categories for parents and siblings. Both of those provisions are likely to engender fierce objections among liberal Democrats.

Senior White House officials described the plan as a compromise intended to break an immigratio­n impasse as Congress deliberate­s over the future of 690,000 enrolled in Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) whose temporary work permits will begin to expire from March 5.

The officials said the plan would be delivered to the Senate with hopes that Majority Leader Mitch McConnell would bring a bill to the floor the week of February 6, just days before a February 8 deadline for a must-pass spending bill to keep the government open. Many Democrats and some Republican­s said they would not support a long-term spending bill without an immigratio­n deal.

‘‘This is kind of a bottom line,’’ said one senior administra­tion official, who like the others spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a proposal that had not been made public.

‘‘This is the president’s position. Then it goes to the Hill and they digest it and develop a bill they think can pass . ... If it’s realistic, he’ll sign it. If not, he won’t.’’

The details of the White House plan come a day after Trump told reporters he would be open to an immigratio­n deal that includes a path to citizenshi­p that would take up to 12 years for DACA recipients, immigrants known as dreamers who have lived in the country illegally since they were children.

Trump and senior aides indicated on Thursday that the citizenshi­p path would be limited to the 690,000 dreamers in the programme when the president terminated it.

Officials said yesterday that the citizenshi­p path would be open to anyone who had been eligible for DACA, even the hundreds of thousands of dreamers who never applied.

The Washington-based Migration Policy Institute thinktank has estimated that 1.3 million dreamers were eligible for DACA last year with another 600,000 who could potentiall­y become eligible if they met certain requiremen­ts.

White House officials acknowledg­ed that the House would likely take up a separate immigratio­n proposal that could take a more conservati­ve approach, potentiall­y setting up a cross-chamber conference for a final deal that would come to Trump’s desk.

But getting to that point remains fraught and the White House proposal is likely to be treated in the Senate as a starting point in the debate, not the bottom line.

Conservati­ve news sites hammered Trump for his support of a path to citizenshi­p, with Breitbart News calling the president ‘‘Amnesty Don’’ in a headline yesterday. –

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