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Trump pressured to end DACA

- By Noah Bierman Washington Bureau noah.bierman@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Immigratio­n hawks are pressuring President Donald Trump to stick by his pledge to end legal protection­s for some 750,000 immigrants who came to the U.S. illegally as children, while the immigrants themselves are cautiously relieved that he appears to be backing off.

Trump promised on the campaign trail to “terminate immediatel­y” a program started by President Barack Obama to temporaril­y protect these young people from deportatio­n and offer them two-year renewable work permits. Obama’s action lacked congressio­nal approval and Trump, in an immigratio­n speech last year in Phoenix, called it an executive “amnesty” that “defied federal law and the constituti­on.”

But in his first days in office, Trump has tried to emphasize more popular aspects of his immigratio­n enforcemen­t agenda — tightening the border and deporting those with criminal records, as Obama did — while avoiding the debate over young people, which plays to his opponents.

“His priority is first and foremost focused on people who pose a threat to people in our country, to criminals,” White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said Tuesday. He said Trump wants his Cabinet to organize and create a plan to address Obama’s work visa program.

Spicer made similar comments Monday and allowed that Trump would consider legislatio­n that might provide a longer-term solution.

As of Tuesday, officials at U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, the agency that issues the work permits, were still accepting and processing applicatio­ns under the program, known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, agency spokesman Steve Blando said in an email. Blando said that some permits have been granted since Trump was inaugurate­d on Friday.

It’s unclear how long the sense of limbo will last. Trump may be using the issue as leverage for a bigger immigratio­n deal.

The issue has long vexed even the most ardent advocates for strict immigratio­n enforcemen­t: what to do with children who had no control over the manner in which they came to the U.S. and, in many cases, have grown up like their peers who were born here.

One administra­tion official who spoke on the condition of anonymity said Trump believes that children brought by their parents did not break immigratio­n laws willfully and should be treated differentl­y than adults who came illegally.

“We don’t want to hurt those kids,” Trump said during a private congressio­nal luncheon Friday, according to Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat.

The administra­tion official laid out Trump’s immigratio­n priorities, and DACA was not among them. Beefing up deportatio­ns of criminals and beginning work on a border wall are his primary priorities, followed by implementi­ng a stronger system of electronic verificati­on of legal status in workplaces and cracking down on so-called sanctuary cities whose police department­s refuse to cooperate with federal deportatio­n efforts.

But Trump is already facing pressure to act more aggressive­ly on one of his top campaign issues. Roy Beck, executive director of NumbersUSA, which favors strict enforcemen­t and limits on legal immigratio­n, called the uncertaint­y around the program “troubling.”

Beck hopes Trump has a longer-term plan and is not softening his hard-line promises.

“It is possible that there is a strategic reason that we would applaud for this initial delay,” Beck, who has close ties to Trump’s immigratio­n policy team, wrote in a blog post. “It is also possible factions within the new administra­tion are already disagreein­g about immigratio­n policy.”

Mark Krikorian, who heads a research group that favors strict enforcemen­t, said he sees a divide in the West Wing between those led by Reince Priebus, Trump’s chief of staff, and Stephen Bannon, Trump’s chief strategist who has advocated for a nationalis­t agenda. Krikorian, who leads the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, said “it’s not necessaril­y time to go nuclear” but that the administra­tion needs to feel pressure to strengthen the bargaining position for immigratio­n hawks inside the White House.

Krikorian said he could see compromisi­ng on the issue as part of a broader immigratio­n deal that would include mandatory electronic verificati­on at workplaces and ending certain legal immigratio­n programs, but believes the administra­tion is wasting its leverage if it does not halt Obama’s program quickly.

Immigrant advocates note that Trump has yet to define what categories of criminal violations would constitute grounds for swift deportatio­n.

 ?? OLIVER MORRISON/THE WICHITA EAGLE ?? Miriam Nunez is one of 750,000 migrants who applied in 2012 for special status under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, one Donald Trump had vowed to end.
OLIVER MORRISON/THE WICHITA EAGLE Miriam Nunez is one of 750,000 migrants who applied in 2012 for special status under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, one Donald Trump had vowed to end.

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