The Freeman

US citizenshi­p plan for 1.8M ‘undocu’ immigrants — Trump

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WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump's administra­tion on Thursday unveiled a sweeping new immigratio­n plan to Congress that offers 1.8 million young unauthoriz­ed immigrants known as “Dreamers” a path to citizenshi­p over 10-12 years.

In a comprehens­ive reform that will be formally presented next week, Trump has also asked Congress to eliminate the popular "green card lottery" program and severely restrict family immigratio­n, steps analysts say could cut in half of more than one million foreign-born people moving to the country annually.

And in the name of halting illegal immigratio­n, he has also demanded Congress budget $25 billion for a "trust fund" for constructi­ng a wall on the US-Mexico border — a major plank of Trump's White House campaign.

"The Department of Homeland Security must have the tools to deter illegal immigrants; the ability to remove individual­s who illegally enter the United States, and the vital authoritie­s necessary to protect national security," a senior White House official told journalist­s.

The White House's offer of a path to citizenshi­p for the Dreamers was much wider than expected. Earlier it had suggested it was only open to granting citizenshi­p to the 690,000 young immigrants registered under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program.

But in exchange, Trump was asking Congress to make future legal immigratio­n more difficult -- and to shore up the Homeland Security Department's toolbox and funding to crack down on the overall population of unauthoriz­ed immigrants, estimated at some 11 million, including Dreamers.

That could make the plan difficult to get past Democrats, no matter how strong they want the Dreamers reform.

"There is no public policy justificat­ion for cutting legal immigratio­n in half. None," said Democratic Senator Brian Schatz on Twitter.

The plan represents a sharp shift in US immigratio­n policies. Trump promised during his 2016 presidenti­al campaign a tough crackdown on illegal immigratio­n, but has extended this to narrowing the doors for legal immigrants and refugees.

The end of the lottery system — which was introduced in 1990 to diversify the origins of new immigrants — was expected and has support from some Democrats. Trump has argued the program has allowed people into the country who have supported Islamic extremists.

"This program is riddled with fraud and abuse and does not serve the national interest," the White House said in a summary Thursday.

Trump however at least momentaril­y undermined his push against the lottery when, in immigratio­n bill negotiatio­ns with lawmakers in early January, he complained about immigrants from what he reportedly dubbed "shithole" nations like Haiti, El Salvador and countries in Africa, sparking widespread outrage.

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