San Francisco Chronicle

Dreamers fiasco angers many

Trump sprang trap, but it was set by Obama

- Email: ruben@rubennavar­rette.com

For writers, happiness is overrated. Some of the best columns have been fueled by anger.

And now that President Trump has turned upside down the lives of about 800,000 hardworkin­g but undocument­ed young people — all by springing a trap set by his predecesso­r, President Barack Obama, to win re-election in 2012 — I have plenty of anger to go around.

Above all, I’m angry with Trump. Whether he is calling Mexican immigrants criminals, or questionin­g whether a “Mexican” federal judge born in the United States can adjudicate fairly, or pardoning retired Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio after the lawman-turned-outlaw defied a federal court order and continued to profile Latinos, this president seems to enjoy inflicting pain and humiliatio­n on America’s largest minority.

Now, in the deepest cut, the White House has ended the program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. Congress has six months to find a solution that allows recipients to stay in the country legally.

I’m no psychiatri­st. But the same president who appeared to defend white racists at Charlottes­ville, Va., sees red when it comes to brown people.

Trump will never be remembered by history as a great president; he’s too small, weak, petty and thin-skinned. But he may well go down as the most brazenly anti-Latino president in the last 60 years. It was in the 1956 presidenti­al election that the Republican ticket of Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon threw out the first pitch to Latino voters in Nixon’s home state of California and put that demographi­c on the political map.

Thanks to Hurricane Donald, the GOP now stands accused of — as NBC News veteran Tom Brokaw put it — “declaring war on Hispanics in this country.” On MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” where the liberal hosts seem to care more about defending immigrants since Trump became president, Brokaw called the terminatio­n of DACA “a continuati­on of the Republican determinat­ion to cut out Hispanic votes on their side, for as long as we can see.”

In the new horror movie “It,” there is that moment when a group of kids realize that a clown is evil.

For Dreamers — who came here as children and, intent on conquering the world, became better at being “American” than the native-born, who think the world owes them a living — that moment came this week when the clown in the Oval Office showed his teeth.

Meanwhile, let’s not forget the accomplice. Trump may have fired the shot, but it was Obama who loaded the gun.

Half a million undocument­ed young people who wanted to believe that this country loved them half as much as they loved the country put their trust in the pretty words of a president who sprinkled them like fertilizer. In exchange for a two-year work permit and a chance to prove themselves to America, they foolishly handed over to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t their fingerprin­ts, home addresses and the names of undocument­ed family members.

Good plan. What could go wrong? This time bomb was bound to explode. That was the idea.

Stick with me. The D in DACA stands for “deferred.” What is being deferred? Despite what some wildly misinforme­d elements of the Latino left tried to tell me this week, it was never legalizati­on. It was always deportatio­n. It’s baffling to me that there are liberals who are so eager to praise Obama that they actually believe that DACA put young people on a path to citizenshi­p.

That’s idiotic. DACA was only intended to do one thing: Put young people on a bus or plane to their home country. In fact, when you think about it, those 800,000 young people who enrolled are already in ICE custody. They’re just on a temporary furlough.

We might as well add them to the tally of the 3 million people that Obama deported the oldfashion­ed way to alleviate the anxiety of African Americans and white union members who aren’t up to the task of competing with foreign workers.

My friends on the left think I’m being too hard on the Dreamers. When you’re drowning, they say, you’ll reach for anything.

Maybe. But that shouldn’t include an anvil.

Americans are right to be angry. Let’s channel that anger into something positive. We need something that DACA wasn’t: a permanent legislativ­e solution. And instead of an elitist giveaway to Dreamers, we need a remedy that extends to their parents. And we needed it, oh, about five years ago.

 ?? David McNew / Getty Images ?? A man carries a picture as thousands of immigrants and their supporters join a Defend DACA march in Los Angeles on Sunday to oppose President Trump’s order to end the DACA program. The 800,000 who signed up for the Obama-era program, and their...
David McNew / Getty Images A man carries a picture as thousands of immigrants and their supporters join a Defend DACA march in Los Angeles on Sunday to oppose President Trump’s order to end the DACA program. The 800,000 who signed up for the Obama-era program, and their...

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