Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Immigrants, like all Americans, are hard to categorize

- Esther J. Cepeda Columnist

Donald Trump has managed to do that which eluded Barack Obama: Fulfill his campaign promises on immigratio­n.

Last week, Trump announced that he would end the always-explicitly-temporary Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. He also suggested that Congress act within the next six months to enact permanent legislatio­n.

While it may be satisfying to proclaim, as many immigrantr­ights leaders and their allies have, that Trump’s move was “evil,” “cruel” and “the worst decision Trump has made,” doing so ignores the fact that the groundwork was laid by someone else.

For starters, a quick recap of how DACA came to be.

In 2010, President Obama failed to gather the five Democratic holdout votes that would have passed the full DREAM Act, which included a path to citizenshi­p. Then, in late May 2012, Obama issued his executive action on DACA, overruling longstandi­ng objections (on the grounds of constituti­onality) by his Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano — who, ironically, is now suing the Trump administra­tion for violating administra­tive procedures and due-process requiremen­ts by abruptly ending the program. When DACA was announced in the middle of Obama’s re-election campaign, it was seen as a patronizin­g halfmeasur­e since the president had spent all of his limited political capital on passing the Affordable Care Act.

By late October, news agencies were reporting that some Hispanics who might have considered voting for Mitt Romney based on their views about economic issues were turning toward Obama because of his support of the DREAM Act and immigrant rights in general.

Sure enough, Obama coasted into his second term with the help of Hispanic voters. He eventually left office with Latinos primarily rememberin­g him as the “deporter in chief.”

The truth is that although DACA’s revocation is terribly upsetting for the hundreds of thousands of unlawfully present immigrants and their families, we all knew this day would come.

This doesn’t necessaril­y make the situation any easier, but it does no one any good to push the myth that young people are suffering solely at the hands of Republican­s and a president who was specifical­ly elected to rid the country of as many immigrants — legal and not legal — as possible.

If we’ve learned anything in the last five years, it is that making angels or demons of political opponents isn’t productive.

Interestin­gly, this idea of not vilifying or beatifying is being exemplifie­d by the very people who have most benefited from being portrayed as saintly. DACA beneficiar­ies and other unlawfully present young immigrants are increasing­ly speaking out against their model minority status within the larger universe of the illegal immigrant population.

In an op-ed for The New York Times, author Masha Gessen stated: “If immigratio­n is debated only in terms of whether it benefits the economy, politician­s begin to divide people into two categories: ‘valuable’ and ‘illegal.’ When countries make people illegal, the world comes apart. When we agree to talk about people as cogs, we lose our humanity.”

We truly have lost our humanity when we give in to hyperbole and refer to an opposing party as “evil” and “monstrous” — even when leaders like Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, declare (falsely) that DACA recipients are by and large gang members and drug smugglers. But how different are those who idealize only certain members of a population of unauthoriz­ed immigrants?

This country will never reconcile its immigratio­n issues, much less decide who gets to stay and who must go, if it can’t acknowledg­e that immigrants are like all other Americans: varied, different and not easily lumped into categories that accurately quantify their worth to our community.

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