Texarkana Gazette

DACA negotiator­s lean on Trump whisperer Lindsay Graham

- By Emma Dumain and Andrea Drusch

WASHINGTON—Sen. Lindsey Graham is in a pivotal position to help craft a deal to help keep 800,000 young immigrants in this country.

The South Carolina Republican enjoys unique access to President Donald Trump that virtually none of his colleagues share. He receives regular calls from Trump on his cellphone. On Sunday, Graham joined the president for a round of golf in Palm Beach, where immigratio­n was the main topic of discussion.

Graham downplayed his influence on the commander in chief, saying he was one of many lawmakers Trump regularly rings up for a “temperatur­e check” on the news of the day.

But Graham, who endured verbal abuse from Trump throughout the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, has emerged as the senator Trump calls the “Down-The-Middle-Guy” who can offer blunt assessment­s of the diciest policy debates and help the president understand political dynamics from all sides.

In the days ahead, Graham could end up serving as a bridge between his Capitol Hill colleagues and Trump, who has said he has plans to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program in March.

He has asked Congress to come up with a legislativ­e remedy.

Publicly, the White House is demanding strict changes to current immigratio­n law and increased border security in exchange for sparing current DACA beneficiar­ies from deportatio­n. In private negotiatio­ns, the president has indicated a willingnes­s to cut a deal.

That dynamic has created some chaos on Capitol Hill, where multiple working groups, on both sides of the aisle and in both chambers, are working furiously to come up with a proposal they can sell widely. Each group is convinced Trump could wind up on their side.

That’s where Graham, who has worked on immigratio­n policy with Democrats and Republican­s for years, could be crucial.

Graham and Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois and Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., are pushing for a plan that includes the DREAM Act, which gives DACA recipients a pathway to legal status. It has support from members of both parties.

Flake told McClatchy that Graham’s line to Trump was important to their efforts.

“Lindsey has the closest relationsh­ip with the president out of all of us, certainly,” Flake said.

The Monday after the golfing excursion at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s Florida retreat, Graham returned to the Senate with perhaps the most up-to-date set of demands.

“I think a good deal would be secure the border, change our immigratio­n system to move towards a merit-based immigratio­n system,” Graham told McClatchy. “Green cards should be limited to minor children and spouses and give the DACA kids a pathway to citizenshi­p they have to earn … (and) secure the border with a wall component. I think that’s the deal.”

Graham’s readout of Trump’s wish list, which he appeared to endorse, isn’t the final word. And until Trump offers more clarity, several groups of lawmakers from other corners of the Capitol are continuing to explore different fixes.

One group of Senate Republican­s has offered a proposal they say boosts border security significan­tly while giving Democrats a DACA solution many of that party’s negotiator­s have supported in the past. That proposal, unveiled by Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn, R-Texas, was panned by Senate Democrats.

Republican­s want changes to how to handle chain migration, which allows citizens and people with green cards to secure visas for their family members.

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