Chattanooga Times Free Press

House Speaker Harwell praises Trump’s move to end DACA

- Contact Andy Sher at asher@ timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow on Twitter @AndySher1. BY ANDY SHER STAFF WRITER

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Republican House Speaker Beth Harwell on Wednesday praised President Donald Trump’s decision to end an Obamaera program that protects as many as 800,000 young undocument­ed immigrants, including 8,000 in Tennessee, from deportatio­n.

“I think President Trump is taking a stand that was what he campaigned on, and I think he’s living up to his promise to the American people,” said Harwell, who is running for governor.

Harwell responded to reporters’ questions after the final meeting of the Nashville speaker’s Ad Hoc Task Force on Opioid Abuse in which a bipartisan group of lawmakers under her direction adopted recommenda­tions she hopes to press as legislatio­n in the General Assembly next year.

On Tuesday, Trump administra­tion officials announced the president would end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in six months, giving the GOP-controlled Congress a half year to act to preserve the program created by then-President Barack Obama through executive order.

The DACA program provides protection from deportatio­n to young immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children if they undergo criminal background checks, among other steps.

Asked whether she approved of Trump’s action, Harwell said, “I do. I think the former president, Obama, overstretc­hed, and I thought it was unconstitu­tional what he did. And I commend the president for reining it back in.”

As for the potential impact on DACA enrollees now living in Tennessee, Harwell said, “they’re allowed to attend our universiti­es currently, and they are. They’re just not given in-state tuition.”

“We’ll see what Congress does,” Harwell said.

“I mean, what the president’s done is throw it into the laps of Congress, which is where it belongs,” said the speaker, whose GOP gubernator­ial rivals include a congresswo­man, U.S. Rep. Diane Black of Gallatin. “And,” Harwell noted, “he’s given them six months back and let’s hope — for once — they [Congress] can do something, get something accomplish­ed.”

In 2015, Tennessee efforts to allow DACA enrollees to pay in-state tuition to attend state public colleges and universiti­es passed the state Senate, but the bill failed in the House by a single vote.

Harwell, who had not been inside the chamber at the time, missed that vote. But she told reporters afterward that she would have voted against the legislatio­n had she been inside the chamber.

The speaker, meanwhile, said in response to another question from reporters that she concurs with last week’s Tennessee Capitol Commission decision to reject efforts by Republican Gov. Bill Haslam’s administra­tion to remove the bust of Confederat­e Cavalry Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest from its honored perch in the state Capitol.

Haslam said that given Forrest’s divisive history — he made his pre-Civil War living in part through slave trading and after the war became an early Ku Klux Klan leader — the bust was better suited to a museum than the Capitol.

“I respect the Tennessee Historical Commission’s decision and I’ll abide by it,” said Harwell, evidently confusing the historical commission with the capitol commission. “I agree with the Tennessee Historical Commission’s decision.”

Had the Capitol Commission agreed with the governor’s efforts, the matter would have then gone to the Historical Commission.

But Haslam’s efforts foundered last week in a 7-5 vote with two Republican legislator­s and the state comptrolle­r, treasurer and secretary of state, all appointed by the Republican General Assembly, among those voting no to removing Forrest’s bust.

On the national level, controvers­ies over the honoring of Confederat­e figures in public spaces have soared after clashes in Charlottes­ville, Va., where a woman was killed by a protester associated with white supremacis­t groups demonstrat­ing in support of a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee.

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Beth Harwell

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