Chicago Sun-Times

Make America ‘ great again’: Give a break to ‘ dreamers’

- BY LINDACHAVE­Z Linda Chavez is the author of ” An Unlikely Conservati­ve: The Transforma­tion of an Ex- Liberal.”

President Donald Trump may not yet have built his ” big, beautiful wall” along the southern border or figured out a way to makeMexico pay for it, but immigratio­n is one area where the president seems committed to keeping his campaign promises.

Illegal immigratio­n, which was already at a 40- plus- year low when the president was sworn in, has fallen even further in his first six months in office. The administra­tion has stepped up immigratio­n arrests, averaging over 13,000 a month since February, abandoning the policy in effect under several previous presidents that concentrat­ed on rounding up criminals and recent arrivals.

And the administra­tion is intent on punishing cities and states that are insufficie­ntly cooperativ­e on immigratio­n enforcemen­t, though its efforts to withhold federal funds from such jurisdicti­ons is being challenged in the courts.

You’d think this would be enough to satisfy immigratio­n hard- liners, but some are still grousing that Trump has yet to pull the plug on the Barack Obama- backed program that gave temporary protection from deportatio­n to illegal immigrants who came to the U. S. as children or young teens. The so- called “dreamers” seem to be the only foreignbor­n residents for whom Trump has a soft spot— save for his wives and seasonal visa holders on the payroll atMar-a- Lago.

The president has, so far, refused to rescind the Obama administra­tion’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, but now several states are threatenin­g to sue if he doesn’t suspend the program, which currently gives some 800,000 dreamers the right to live and work in the U. S. provided they are enrolled in college or serve in the military, pass a background check and have no criminal record. What Trump should do instead is get behind legislatio­n introduced by Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R- Fla., the Recognizin­g America’s Children Act, which currently has 17 Republican co- sponsors in the House.

RAC, like previous legislativ­e attempts to grant legal status to those who arrived as minors, would give provisiona­l status to applicants who were in school, worked continuous­ly or enlisted in the military. All applicants would have to pass rigorous background checks, have no criminal record, could not receive public welfare and would have to submit biometric data. Only those who fulfilled these obligation­s, paid taxes— including any back taxes owed plus interest— and stayed employed or in school or in themilitar­y would be eligible to become legal permanent residents.

Most Americans, including 7 in 10 Trump voters in a recent Morning Consult/ Politico poll, favor allowing childhood arrivals to remain in the U. S. and be granted legal status. And it’s no wonder; these are the most productive and sympatheti­c group of illegal

The average DACA participan­t is 22 years old, employed and earns $ 17 an hour.

immigrants. Most were too young to have knowingly violated U. S. law. They came here as youngsters, went to American schools, learned English and know no other country but this one as home.

A recent Cato Institute study of these young people reveals that the average DACA participan­t is 22 years old, employed and earns $ 17 an hour. Most are also enrolled in higher education, and 17 percent are pursuing advanced degrees. These are exactly the kind of immigrants America should want. What possible benefit would be gained by removing these young people — especially after we’ve already invested in educating them?

Republican­s have increasing­ly earned a reputation as anti- immigrant— no one more so than Trump. But immigratio­n is part of what makes America America. We aren’t a nation that defines itself by blood. We attract the best and brightest and hardest- working people from all over the world, and we always have. Formost of our history, our doors were wide open, admitting anyone who had the will to get here. And our generous immigratio­n policies have helpedmake us the most productive and successful nation in the history of the world. We are constantly renewing ourselves and gaining in the process.

President Trump has few legislativ­e victories to claim. Getting behind the Recognizin­g America’s Children Act could give him a needed win— and fulfill his most important promise: to make America great again.

 ?? | SAUL LOEB/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump
| SAUL LOEB/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump

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