Texarkana Gazette

A look at Trump’s threat of a March 5 deadline for Dreamers

The Associated Press

- By Alan Fram AP reporters Jill Colvin and Mark Sherman contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON— President Donald Trump is still trying to pressure Congress to pass immigratio­n legislatio­n by March 5. Thanks to the federal courts, the impact of his deadline is less threatenin­g than it was originally, at least for now.

The Senate on Thursday rejected competing bills protecting “Dreamers,” a sign of how difficult it will be for lawmakers to pass legislatio­n in this election year that would protect the young immigrants from deportatio­n.

A look at that date’s significan­ce and what’s facing hundreds of thousands of Dreamers wondering what comes next:

THE BEGINNING

In September, Trump said he was ending President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. He said Obama had exceeded his executive powers when he created DACA.

Yet Trump also gave lawmakers until March 5 to send him legislatio­n renewing the program, which at last count gives 690,000 Dreamers the temporary ability to live and work in the U.S. Dreamers are younger immigrants who arrived in the country illegally as children.

COURTS STEP IN

In recent weeks, federal judges in San Francisco and New York have made Trump’s deadline temporaril­y moot.

They’ve issued injunction­s ordering the Trump administra­tion to keep DACA in place while courts consider legal challenges to Trump’s terminatio­n of the program. The judicial process could take months.

ADMINISTRA­TION’S MOVES

U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services has said it is still accepting applicatio­ns to renew DACA status for people whose twoyear eligibilit­y expires. That includes renewals for applicants whose permits expire after March 5.

But top administra­tion officials have sent mixed messages about what will happen after March 5.

Trump has said he has the right to push the deadline later and might be willing to do that. But Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen has described that as possibly unconstitu­tional.

White House chief of staff John Kelly has said Trump won’t extend the March 5 date.

He’s also said the government won’t start deporting Dreamers who don’t have criminal records on that date.

SO FOR NOW …

Until the Supreme Court rules definitive­ly on the case, Congress is feeling less pressure to act quickly. And Dreamers can continue renewing their status.

But there’s a catch. While the lower courts’ rulings allow recipients to reapply for DACA protection­s, those applicatio­ns take months to adjudicate. During that time, applicants aren’t allowed to work and could be detained and put in deportatio­n proceeding­s.

CONGRESS TO THE RESCUE?

That’s hard to imagine, since the Senate decisively rejected Trump’s and other bills Thursday protecting Dreamers and taking other immigratio­n steps. House leaders still haven’t lined up enough support to pass their own legislatio­n.

One possibilit­y: A measure that would extend DACA for a year and give Trump a year’s worth of money for his wall.

That might end up in a bill financing government agencies that Congress plans to consider by late March.

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