San Francisco Chronicle

‘Dreamers’ left in limbo as guns now top agenda for lawmakers

- By Alan Fram Alan Fram is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — It’s taken just two weeks for Washington’s immigratio­n battle to fade from blistering to backburner. Lawmakers now seem likely to do little or nothing this election year on an effort that’s been eclipsed by Congress’ new focus on guns, bloodied by Senate defeats and relegated to B-level urgency by a Supreme Court ruling.

Talks have gone dormant that sought a bipartisan package: A chance for citizenshi­p for young immigrants brought to the country illegally and $25 billion for President Trump to erect his treasured wall with Mexico. Even a proposal dangling modest wins for both sides — a threeyear renewal of a program protecting hundreds of thousands of those young immigrants from deportatio­n in exchange for a $7.6 billion down payment for the wall — seems a longshot.

“The prospects for immigratio­n legislatio­n, big or small, are very, very bleak,” concedes Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, an immigrants’ rights group.

Distrust between the two parties has intensifie­d, with each suspecting the other of weaponizin­g the impasse to rouse loyal voters for November’s contest for congressio­nal control. There are tactical rifts between Democrats and the coalition of liberal and immigrants’ rights organizati­ons over how aggressive­ly to force the issue, and difference­s between conservati­ve organizati­ons and some Republican­s over the wisdom of even a narrow accord.

Looking to furnish political cover to rank-and-file Republican­s, House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., only want to consider immigratio­n bills that have Trump’s support. Democrats say Trump’s portrayal of immigrants as threats who commit crimes and steal jobs, plus his vulgar references to their countries, shows he’s not serious about compromise — yet leaves him pivotal for any deal.

“There are certain people and certain countries that Donald Trump does not envision as part of America’s future,” said No. 2 Senate Democratic leader Richard Durbin of Illinois. “Until the president and the Republican­s in Congress believe that deporting the Dreamers is so much of a political negative that they must do something, I think it’s unlikely that we’ll move forward.”

Rather than making new offers, Trump is blaming Democrats for the stalemate.

“I’m the one that’s pushing DACA and the Democrats are nowhere to be found,” he tweeted last week, referring to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Hoping to recapture attention, immigrant and civil rights groups plan demonstrat­ions in Washington and elsewhere on Monday. When Trump announced last year that he was terminatin­g DACA, he gave Congress until that date, March 5, to replace it.

The program, which President Barack Obama created administra­tively without enactment of a law, lets immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children get jobs for renewable two-year periods. It’s currently protecting 680,000 of them.

The Supreme Court last week erased that deadline’s impact with a ruling that requires the administra­tion to renew DACA permits while lower court challenges to Trump’s action continue. Those lawsuits could drag on for months, easing pressure on Congress to act quickly.

Lawmakers are now fixated on last month’s shooting deaths of 17 students and faculty members at a high school in Parkland, Fla. The shift accentuate­s how rapidly priorities shift in Congress, fueled by today’s hyper-speed news cycles and a president whose tweets and utterances add additional volatility.

Last month, the Senate rejected a Trump proposal offering citizenshi­p to people protected by DACA, fully financing his wall, cutting legal immigratio­n and ending a visa lottery for people from countries with low U.S. immigratio­n rates. A bipartisan plan backed by nearly all Democrats included potential citizenshi­p for DACA recipients and money for Trump’s wall, barred the young immigrants from sponsoring their parents and left the visa lottery intact.

Neither side is showing any indication of sweetening its offer.

“We’ve offered the sun and the moon and that wasn’t enough,” said Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the second-ranking GOP leader. “I guess we’ll see what happens.”

Democrats face pressure from liberal groups like Indivisibl­e and United We Dream to use coming budget legislatio­n to crimp money for immigratio­n enforcemen­t programs. But with several Senate Democrats facing tough re-election fights in Trump-friendly states leery of that stance, the party has little leverage.

Clarissa Martinez, a policy chief for UnidosUS, an immigrants’ rights group, said Democrats should force votes on the issue to drive home how immigrants bolster the economy. She cited the repeated, doomed votes Republican­s forced under President Barack Obama to repeal his health care law “because they had a narrative they were building.”

Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., who’s joined bipartisan efforts to forge compromise, says he’ll try forcing a vote on his plan to extend DACA for three years and supplying three years of financing for Trump’s wall.

But many Democrats oppose it, saying they abhor financing the wall in exchange for merely a temporary DACA extension. Groups like the Center for Immigratio­n Studies that favor tight restrictio­ns are also opposed, saying it would inscribe DACA into law, and conservati­ves such as Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, seem certain to block Flake.

Flake said he’d keep trying anyway.

“At some point we’re going to want to put this behind us, even if there’s no deadline. I don’t think this plays into our favor in the midterms,” he said.

 ?? Susan Walsh / Associated Press ?? Officers arrest immigratio­n rights demonstrat­ors blocking a street Thursday near the Capitol in Washington. Congress now appears unlikely to act this year on immigratio­n overhaul.
Susan Walsh / Associated Press Officers arrest immigratio­n rights demonstrat­ors blocking a street Thursday near the Capitol in Washington. Congress now appears unlikely to act this year on immigratio­n overhaul.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States