The Day

Trump links wall to DACA

He issues priorty list for deal, including green card reform

- By JILL COLVIN

Washington — President Donald Trump told congressio­nal leaders on Sunday that his hard-line immigratio­n priorities must be enacted in exchange for extending protection from deportatio­n to hundreds of thousands of young immigrants, many of whom were brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

Trump's list of demands included overhaulin­g the country's green-card system, a crackdown on unaccompan­ied minors entering the country, and building his promised wall along the southern border.

Many were policies Democrats have said explicitly are off the table and threaten to derail ongoing negotiatio­ns over legislatio­n protecting young immigrants known as “Dreamers.” They had been given a reprieve from deportatio­n and the ability to work legally in the country under President Barack Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program, which Trump ended last month.

In a letter to House and Senate leaders released by the White House, Trump said the priorities were the

product of “a bottom-up review of all immigratio­n policies” that he had ordered “to determine what legislativ­e reforms are essential for America's economic and national security.

“These findings outline reforms that must be included as part of any legislatio­n addressing the status of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients,” he wrote, adding that: “Without these reforms, illegal immigratio­n and chain migration, which severely and unfairly burden American workers and taxpayers, will continue without end.”

Trump announced last month that he was ending the DACA program, but he gave Congress six months to come up with a legislativ­e fix before recipients began to lose their status. Trump suggested at the time that he was eager for a deal, telling reporters, “I have a love for these people and hopefully now Congress will be able to help them and do it properly.”

He'd also tweeted that if Congress was unwilling to find a fix, he would “revisit this issue!” in six months.

Trump had previously said he wanted a DACA deal to include significan­t money for border security and eventual funding for his border wall. But the priorities released by the White House went far beyond that.

They included a complete overhaul of the green-card system that would limit family-based green cards to spouses and the minor children of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents as part of an effort to end what is known as “chain migration.”

The White House also said it wants to boost fees at border crossings, hire 10,000 more immigratio­n enforcemen­t officers, make it easier to deport gang members and unaccompan­ied children, and overhaul the asylum system. And it wants new measures to crack down on “sanctuary cities,” which don't share informatio­n with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, among other proposals.

“These priorities are essential to mitigate the legal and economic consequenc­es of any grants or status to DACA recipients,” White House legislativ­e affairs director Marc Short told reporters in a Sunday evening conference call. “We're asking that these reforms be included in any legislatio­n concerning the status of DACA recipients.”

But it remained unclear whether the president considers each of the more than a dozen priorities to be non-negotiable or whether the White House sees them more as a starting point for negotiatio­n with members of Congress. Officials on the call notably declined to say whether the president would veto legislatio­n that did not include each and every one of them.

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