Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.S. keeps DACA protection­s

DAPA reversed in ‘house cleaning’

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion reversed one Obama-era immigratio­n policy and left another intact — for now, at least.

Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly announced the actions in a memorandum that said he was rescinding the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, known as DAPA, rather than try to defend the Obama administra­tion policy in court.

But Kelly said he would leave in effect the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, known as the DACA program, which provides children who were brought into the United States illegally with protection from deportatio­n.

However, administra­tion officials said Friday afternoon that no final decision on DACA had been made. “The future of the DACA program continues to be under review with the administra­tion,” Jonathan Hoffman, an assistant secretary for public affairs at Homeland Security, said in a statement.

The actions both gave relief and created frustratio­n Friday for interested parties in Southwest cities like Las Vegas with large Latino population­s.

“It’s unfortunat­e,” Rep. Ruben Kihuen, D-nev., a Mexican-born immigrant

who legally immigrated to the United States with his parents in the 1980s, said of the decision to cancel DAPA.

“It’s just Band-aids on broken legs,” Kihuen said.

The DAPA policy would

IMMIGRATIO­N

have provided protection­s from deportatio­n for undocument­ed immigrants with a U.s.-born child or one with permanent resident status.

That DAPA policy in 2014 was immediatel­y challenged by 26 states, including Nevada, in the U.S. Southern District of Texas.

Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt called the Obama policies unconstitu­tional when the state joined the multi-state challenge.

A federal judge in South Texas issued an injunction against the policy, which was upheld by the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who filed the lawsuit that halted the 2014 memo, applauded the decision to cancel DAPA. “I am proud to have led a 26-state coalition that went all the way to the Supreme Court to block this unlawful edict.”

President Donald Trump, as a candidate, called for eliminatio­n of the two Obama administra­tion immigratio­n policies, which he said defied the Constituti­on and federal law. But Trump, after the election, said he favored the policy that protected children who were brought here illegally from being deported.

The Trump administra­tion has stepped up deportatio­ns of undocument­ed immigrants and the president has called for a wall to be built across the 2,000-mile U.s.-mexico border to stop illegal immigratio­n.

Nevada has roughly 210,000 undocument­ed immigrants, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, with about 20,000 children and teenagers eligible for DACA protection­s. Pro-immigratio­n advocates estimate another 30,000 adults would have been eligible for DAPA.

Federal immigratio­n policy resonates in Southwest cities, like Las Vegas, where 30 percent of the population, or about 627,000 people, are Latino. Of those, 76 percent are of Mexican descent, according to the Pew Hispanic Center.

Still, immigratio­n remains a politicall­y divisive issue nationally.

A bipartisan effort to craft a comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform bill in 2013, which included a path to citizenshi­p, was passed in the Senate but died in the House for lack of action.

Democrats and Republican­s have reintroduc­ed a bill that would extend protection­s to children brought here illegally, the so-called “Dreamers” who are going to school or serving in the military.

“I believe that our immigratio­n system is fundamenta­lly broken and in need of legislativ­e reforms,” said Sen. Dean Heller, R-nev., who voted for the 2013 bill and co-sponsored legislatio­n that provides Daca-eligible people with protection­s and employment authorizat­ion.

But the decision by the Trump administra­tion on DAPA leaves the parents of many of those people in fear of deportatio­n.

“Without DAPA, U.S. citizens will continue to face the very real and disturbing possibilit­y of having their whole families torn away from them,” said Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev.

She called the Trump repeal of DAPA a “brazen lack of empathy for immigrant communitie­s.”

Rep. Jacky Rosen, D-nev., said DAPA was designed to bring undocument­ed immigrants out of the shadows and allow them to contribute to their local communitie­s and pay taxes. She called the administra­tion decision “another move in the wrong direction.”

Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform, praised Kelly’s rescission of the 2014 initiative but said it also “calls into question the legitimacy of DACA as well.”

Kihuen, who was naturalize­d under President Ronald Reagan’s policies, noted that the eventual fate of the DACA policy is still in doubt.

“It leaves a lot of uncertaint­ies,” Kihuen said. “It’s unfortunat­e that now the parents of a lot of these Dreamers are going to live in fear.”

Contact Gary Martin at 202-6627390 or gmartin@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter. The Associated Press and Bloomberg News contribute­d to this report.

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