San Diego Union-Tribune

SENATORS UNVEIL IMMIGRATIO­N BILL AIMED AT PROTECTION FOR ‘DREAMERS’

With DACA in limbo, Durbin and Graham push bipartisan plan

- BY JUSTINE MCDANIEL

With the future of a program that protects young undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n in limbo, senators on Friday introduced legislatio­n to give them a path to legal residency.

It marks the formal start of the push in this Congress to enact protection­s for those known as “dreamers,” people who were brought to the United States as children. The legislatio­n, introduced by Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has been proposed year after year without success.

The Dream Act, as the bill is known, would allow people who were brought to the United States as children and have a high school education and college enrollment, employment or military service to earn residency and, eventually, citizenshi­p.

The effort is urgent for hundreds of thousands of young adults whose future is in question as a challenge to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that now protects them moves through the courts. The program is also known as DACA.

But any immigratio­n legislatio­n faces a steep climb in a split Congress. It has been more than two decades since Durbin first introduced the act; in the last session of Congress, a version was passed in the House in 2021 but was unsuccessf­ul in the Senate.

Many “dreamers” are protected by DACA, which allows them to work legally and protects them from deportatio­n. But the future of DACA, which has long been challenged by Republican­s who say President Barack Obama oversteppe­d his authority in creating the program, is uncertain: A court case initiated in Texas challengin­g the program could result in an end to DACA.

“Dreamers are teachers, nurses, and small business owners in our communitie­s, but because DACA hangs by a thread in the courts, they live each day in fear of deportatio­n,” Durbin said in a statement Friday. “It is clear that only Congress can give them the stability they deserve and a path to lawful permanent residence.”

The Biden administra­tion has pledged to defend DACA, and the president has urged Congress to pass immigratio­n reform. The Dream Act would help those

young people who fall under its parameters, but it would not provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for other immigrants without legal status.

Republican­s in Congress have in the past tied support for any “dreamer” legislatio­n to tightening enforcemen­t at the U.S. border. Introducin­g the legislatio­n Friday, Graham told his Democratic counterpar­ts that lawmakers must “repair a broken border” before relief for “dreamers” “is remotely possible.”

“The Dreamers represent a class of illegal immigrants that have much public support because they were minors brought here by their parents and America has become their home,” Graham said in a statement. “To provide relief to this population, we must first convince Americans that the unending wave of illegal immigratio­n will stop.”

Immigratio­n advocates have long called on Congress to enact a permanent solution and broader immigratio­n reform.

“Although we welcome steps from Congress to introduce proactive immigratio­n policies that help people, we need to turn these policies into reality,” said Juliana Macedo do Nascimento, deputy director of federal advocacy for the youth-led advocacy network United We Dream. “With the possible end of DACA in the courts, it’s up to President Biden and Congress to pass a pathway to citizenshi­p for all 11 million undocument­ed while ensuring they are protecting the rights of people seeking asylum.”

 ?? RICKY CARIOTI THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. (left), and Dick Durbin, D-Ill., participat­e in a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting on Capitol Hill on Thursday.
RICKY CARIOTI THE WASHINGTON POST Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. (left), and Dick Durbin, D-Ill., participat­e in a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting on Capitol Hill on Thursday.

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