Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Day of reckoning approaches for Trump and Dreamers

- Cokie and Steve Roberts Columnists

President Trump has reached a “moment of reckoning,” says Sen. Lindsey Graham, the outspoken Republican from South Carolina. And he is correct.

The issue is a program created by President Obama called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, which protects immigrants who were brought to this country illegally as youngsters and have lived here ever since.

Since its inception in 2012, the program has been a huge success, enabling about 780,000 youthful immigrants — often called Dreamers — to obtain drivers’ licenses and work permits, go to school, join the military and contribute both their energy and their taxes to their adopted country. Even President Trump, who once vowed to repeal DACA on the campaign trail, has called Dreamers “incredible kids.”

But last month, in a particular­ly vicious and venal act, 10 Republican state attorneys general wrote to the administra­tion demanding that DACA be rescinded. They threatened to sue if the president didn’t cave to their demands by Sept. 5.

In response, Sen. Graham and Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic whip, introduced legislatio­n to make DACA permanent. “To President Trump, you’re going to have to make a decision,” Graham said. “The campaign is over. To the Republican Party: Who are we? What do we believe? When they write the history of these times, I’m going to be with these kids.”

So are we. And so are many Americans from both parties, who reject the nativist mania behind the AGs’ ultimatum. In an editorial, The Wall Street Journal pointed out the folly of rescinding DACA and deporting Dreamers, stating that these AGs would “dedicate scarce enforcemen­t resources to going door-to-door in a University of Texas dorm,” terrorizin­g hardworkin­g, law-abiding students.

So the “moment of reckoning” is up to the president. What he should do is announce, once and for all, that he will preserve DACA and let those “incredible kids” get on with their lives, without the fear of deportatio­n hanging over their heads.

Such a position would be a “political winner.” A CNN poll last March found that only 13 percent of Americans believe that deporting undocument­ed immigrants should be “the government’s top priority.” Sixty percent said the main objective should be “developing a plan to allow those in the U.S. illegally who have jobs to become legal residents.”

But politics is only one argument. Economists have consistent­ly agreed that immigrants — particular­ly young, job-holding, tax-paying immigrants — contribute far more to the economy than they cost.

Then there’s the moral imperative. The Dreamers signed up in good faith and willingly gave personal informatio­n to the government.

For the government now to use that informatio­n to locate and deport them would be a profound breach of trust.

Sen. Cory Booker, a New Jersey Democrat, says that for the Dreamers, ending DACA would be “just a stunning underminin­g of their ability to contribute to the country they know and love.”

On what planet does it make any sense at all to defy every rational argument — political, economic and moral — and purge the country of these productive and patriotic residents?

Abrogating DACA, and endangerin­g the Dreamers, would send a series of devastatin­g messages to the rest of the world: America does not keep its promises. America does not understand, nor does it act on, its own self-interest. America is no longer a moral beacon that lives by its own values.

President Trump keeps saying that he wants to “make America great again.” Here’s a chance, a moment of reckoning, for him to keep that promise.

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