Dayton Daily News

Ohio leaders, lawmakers react to DAGA

Some praise decision to end program; others call for Congress to act.

- By Jessica Wehrman and Jack Torry

— President Donald Trump said his decision Tuesday to phase out a federal program that allows young undocument­ed immigrants to stay in the United States offers “a window of opportunit­y for Congress” to end a decades-long stalemate on Capitol Hill and overhaul the nation’s immigratio­n laws.

Trump said in a statement the 800,000 people impacted by his decision will not be forced to leave the country for another two years.

With his announceme­nt, Trump essentiall­y tossed the issue toward Congress, which has not approved a major revision in the immigratio­n laws since 1986. Instead, congressio­nal efforts to agree on immigra

tion changes collapsed in 2005 and 2006 and a bill which passed the Senate in 2013 died in the Republican-controlled House.

Trump’s announceme­nt invalidate­d an executive order issued by President Barack Obama called the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. That action, initiated in 2012 and expanded in 2014, was met with sharp GOP criticism with Republican­s who insisted Obama had no constituti­onal authority to permit the immigrants to remain in the country. “Today’s announceme­nt puts

the power back with Congress, where it belongs,” said Rep. Steve Stivers, R-Upper Arlington. “Congress has six months to take action to create a permanent, legal and orderly immigratio­n system - which includes addressing DACA recipients.”

Calling the program “one of the most egregious examples of his executive overreach,” Columbus-area Rep. Pat Tiberi, R-Genoa Township, said the six-month window for Congress to act is “an opportunit­y for us to iden-

tify needed solutions that are fair and orderly for Dreamers who didn’t choose to break our laws and know no other home than America.”

“As the son of immigrants who legally came to the United States from Italy, I have seen the success story of legal immigratio­n firsthand,” he said. “In order to ensure this country remains a beacon of hope we must adhere to the Constituti­on, which empowers Congressto write immigratio­n laws, not the executive branch.”

Youngstown-area Democrat Tim Ryan called President Trump’s action “heartless,” “unconscion­able” and “un-American.”

Trump, in a written statement, said while new applicatio­ns for work permits will not be accepted, all existing work permits will be honored until their date of expiration up to two years from Tuesday.

Trump said all submitted applicatio­ns will be processed, as will renewal applicatio­ns for those facing nearterm expiration.

“This is a gradual process, not a sudden phase out,” Trump said.

Hours after Trump announced his decision to rescind Obama’s executive action, Obama sent out a rare statement saying the issue was “about basic decency.”

“This is about whether we are a people who kick hopeful young strivers out of America, or whether we treat them the way we’d want our own kids to be treated,” he said, adding that while both parties have worked to keep those brought over illegally in the U.S., Congress never sent him a bill.

According to the left–leaning For Ohio’s Future Action Fund, some 4,400 young people in the state are here under the program. Interfaith Worker Justice, a group fighting for to keep the program, says the state would lose more than $251.6 million annually in state gross domestic product if the state’s 3,865 “Dreamers” who work leave the workforce.

Rep. Joyce Beatty, a Democrat from the Columbus area, said, “The Dreamers are committed to making America great and are law-abiding, patriotic, innocent young people contributi­ng to their community...Now is the time for Republican­s and Democrats to do what is right, as opposed to green-lighting President Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda.”

The decision also spurred several Ohio colleges and universiti­es to urge Ohio lawmakers to act.

Ohio State University said it sent a letter to the state’s congressio­nal delegation, urging them to “take swift action to find a bipartisan solution that will, at a minimum, codify existing DACA policy into law.”

The university said it’s reviewing Tuesday’s announceme­nt and its potential impacts at Ohio State.

Denison University President Adam Weinberg joined presidents at Kenyon College, Oberlin College, the College of Wooster and Ohio Wesleyan University, urging Brown to uphold the provisions of DACA and “take legislativ­e action to move beyond executive order to a law ensuring its continuati­on.”

“A permanent path forward for these students, American in all but legal status, secures their education and the valuable role they play on our campuses today and in Ohio and the world tomorrow,” the letter read.

‘Today’s announceme­nt puts the power back with Congress, where it belongs.’ Rep. Steve Stivers, R-Upper Arlington ‘Now is the time for Republican­s and Democrats to do what is right, as opposed to green-lighting President Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda.’ Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Columbus

 ?? WALSH / AP CAROLYN KASTER / AP ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the Trump administra­tion will “wind down” a program protecting hundreds of thousands of young immigrants who were brought into the country illegally as children.SUSAN Julia Paley, of Arlington, Va., with the DMV...
WALSH / AP CAROLYN KASTER / AP Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the Trump administra­tion will “wind down” a program protecting hundreds of thousands of young immigrants who were brought into the country illegally as children.SUSAN Julia Paley, of Arlington, Va., with the DMV...

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