The Arizona Republic

McCain, Flake want to help out ‘dreamers’

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WASHINGTON - Sens. John McCain and Jeff Flake seem fine with the Trump administra­tion’s emphasis on aggressive­ly deporting criminal undocument­ed immigrants but also want to focus on resolving the dilemma of the “dreamers.”

President Donald Trump’s Homeland Security Department has said that the young immigrants brought as children to the United States without authorizat­ion — and protected by former President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program — are not targets of the stepped-up deportatio­n effort.

McCain and Flake, both Arizona Republican­s, expressed sympathy and would like Congress to address their status.

“If there are people who have committed crimes that are in the United States of America illegally, we all want them gone,” McCain said earlier this month when asked about the more aggressive direction on deportatio­ns. “That’s just a given . ... I think even the most ardent supporter of immigratio­n does not want people in this country who have committed crimes.”

But when it comes to addressing the “dreamers,” McCain said: “This is the kind of issue that I think needs to be debated.”

Trump’s deportatio­n strategy is detailed in Homeland Security memos released Tuesday. The memos have caused alarm in the immigrant community because, while the main focus is undocument­ed immigrants who have committed crimes, all immigrants in the country without authorizat­ion remain subject to arrest and possible deportatio­n. There also is fear that, in addition to those accused of major crimes, the administra­tion will go after immigrants who have had less serious run-ins with the law.

McCain has not yet commented specifical­ly on the memos; The Arizona Republic’s efforts to seek comment from him on Friday were unsuccessf­ul.

Flake told The Republic that Trump’s immigratio­n plan doesn’t give him heartburn so long as the emphasis is on “deporting criminal aliens” because “that’s what we’ve been calling for.”

“It’s just a symptom of a broken immigratio­n system that we’ve had for a long time,” Flake said Friday of the Homeland Security memos. “If they’re prioritizi­ng, as they say, and as the (Trump) order states, it’s not much different than what was done during the Obama administra­tion. In practice, it may turn out different, but it’s a symptom of a system that needs reform badly.”

Flake is supporting legislatio­n that would put the dreamer protection­s into law in case DACA is eliminated. Obama created the DACA program without Congress via executive action, and Republican­s have complained it was an example of executive outreach. Flake has his own bill that would extend deportatio­n protection­s to dreamers for three years while at the same time tightening enforcemen­t on criminal undocument­ed immigrants in the country.

Action by Congress is needed soon, Flake said, because many DACA participan­ts are going to be timed out of the program and will lose their work permits.

“It has to be Congress, because we’ve all maintained that the president doesn’t have the authority to take that kind of action,” Flake said. “We’re ready to work with the president on that.”

McCain and Flake helped write the most recent Senate-passed comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform bill, which the House of Representa­tives refused to consider in 2013.

The bipartisan legislatio­n, known as the “Gang of Eight” bill, would have balanced a massive investment in border security with a modernized visa system for future foreign workers as well as a pathway to citizenshi­p for many of the undocument­ed immigrants who have already settled in the country.

“If we had passed comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform, which was never brought up in the House of Representa­tives, all of these issues would have been behind us by now, in my view,” McCain said. “Because we would have had things like E-Verify. We would have had people who had to have valid documentat­ion that they were in this country legally or they couldn’t get a job.”

Nowicki is The Arizona Republic’s national political reporter. Follow him on Twitter at @dannowicki and on his official Facebook page.

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