Chicago Sun-Times

Trump waffles on immigratio­n reform

- BY LINDA CHAVEZ Linda Chavez is the author of “An Unlikely Conservati­ve: The Transforma­tion of an Ex- Liberal.” Creators Syndicate

It would be funny if the stakes weren’t so deadly serious. Donald Trump, who launched his campaign for the presidency by attacking Mexican immigrants as “rapists” and ” criminals,” is suddenly embracing the idea of working out a way to give legal status to undocument­ed immigrants who have been here a long time and have kept out of trouble.

Trump won’t call it amnesty, of course, but his position is little different from what’s in the “Gang of Eight” bill his allies on conservati­ve talk radio and cable shows have been deriding as amnesty for years. Of course, Trump’s position could change again between the time you begin reading this column and the time you finish it, but for the moment, let’s take Trump at his ( latest) word.

In a town hall meeting hosted by Sean Hannity this week, Trump said the following: “Everybody agrees we get the bad ones out. But when I go through and I meet thousands and thousands of people on this subject, and I’ve had very strong people come up to me, really great, great people come up to me, and they’ve said, ‘ Mr. Trump, I love you, but to take a person that’s been here for 15 or 20 years and throw them and their family out, it’s so tough, Mr. Trump.’ I mean, I have it all the time. It’s a very, very hard thing.” Indeed.

Trump said his version isn’t amnesty. “No citizenshi­p. Let me go a step further: They’ll pay back taxes. They have to pay taxes. There’s no amnesty, as such, there’s no amnesty, but we work with them,” he said.

Has Trump even read the Senate’s Gang of Eight bill?

The legislatio­n, sponsored by four Republican­s — Sens. John McCain, Marco Rubio, Lindsey Graham and Jeff Flake — passed the Senate in 2013 but subsequent­ly died in the House after conservati­ve talk radio and cable news shows sparked a populist assault on the bill by crying “Amnesty!” But many of the bill’s actual provisions would be much tougher than Trump’s latest, admittedly sketchy, plan.

Immigrants who entered illegally would have to not only pay back taxes but also pay a $ 1,000- per- person fine, learn English and remain employed. Though the bill would provide a so- called path to citizenshi­p, following that path would take a long, long time. During the first 10 years, the immigrants would be eligible for renewable temporary permits and then could apply for permanent residency. Only after three additional years — 13 years in total — could they apply for citizenshi­p, and they would have to meet all the usual requiremen­ts to qualify.

Most important, all the provisions easing access to legal status for the undocument­ed would require that the government demonstrat­e that border security has improved significan­tly. Toward that end, the legislatio­n would include an additional $ 3 billion in funding for more drones and other security measures, allow for the hiring of 3,500 additional border agents, and appropriat­e another $ 1.5 billion for more border fencing. The Department of Homeland Security would have to demonstrat­e it has achieved 100 percent surveillan­ce along the Mexican border and can apprehend 90 percent of unlawful crossers at high- intensity cross points along the southern border before any permanent status or citizenshi­p could take place. Moreover, no previously undocument­ed immigrant would be provided permanent resident status until all current legal applicants receive their green cards.

The bill is far from perfect, but it’s not the free ticket to citizenshi­p for lawbreaker­s that its detractors claim. Trump’s latest comments that it makes no sense to deport millions of people who have lived in the U. S. for a decade or more — which constitute­s two- thirds of the undocument­ed immigrants here now — are a far cry from what he had been saying for the previous 14 months. If he were a serious man rather than a provocateu­r, he’d have figured this out a long time ago. Better late than never? Maybe. We’ll see how long he sticks to this new proposal after the anti- immigrant crowds he’s stirred up turn on him.

 ?? | AP ?? Donald Trump
| AP Donald Trump

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