The Mercury News

Business leaders urge Trump to leave DACA alone

800,000 are shielded from deportatio­n after recent Supreme Court ruling

- By Maggie Haberman

A group of prominent business leaders urged President Donald Trump on Saturday to leave in place a program affecting roughly 800,000 young immigrants who are shielded from deportatio­n, saying it would disrupt the economy and impact the battle against the coronaviru­s.

The letter, from members of the Coalition for the American Dream, an alliance of business and industry leaders, comes after the Supreme Court ruled last month that the Trump administra­tion improperly wound down the Obamaera program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, a finding that was made on procedural grounds. The signers of the letter included executives with Amazon, General Motors, Hilton Worldwide, Target, Apple, Google and Facebook, as well as groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and almost every sector of the manufactur­ing industry.

“As large American employers and employer organizati­ons, we strongly urge you to leave the DACA program in place,” members of the group wrote about the program, which applies to people who were brought to the U.S. as children. “DACA recipients have been critical members of our workforce, industries, and communitie­s for years now, and they have abided by the laws and regulation­s of our country in order to maintain their DACA status.”

The letter went on to say that “their work and commitment to our companies, their families and communitie­s are critical to our nation’s strength, especially since there are tens of thousands of DACA recipients working as front line doctors and nurses and in other critical industries fighting COVID-19.”

“This is no time to disrupt the economic recovery of our companies and communitie­s, nor time to jeopardize the health and safety of these vulnerable individual­s,” the letter said, noting that polls have consistent­ly shown that voters don’t want to see DACA recipients deported. “We ask that you leave DACA in place and refrain from taking any additional administra­tive actions that would negatively impact the DACA program.”

Trump has suggested he would try again to rescind the program, which he has alternatel­y praised and criticized.

On Friday, in an interview with the Spanish-language network Telemundo, Trump gave a confusing statement about his plans to write an immigratio­nrelated executive order in about four weeks.

“DACA is going to be just fine,” Trump said, adding that he was planning to issue a “big executive order. I have the power to do it as president and I’m going to make DACA a part of it.”

Then he immediatel­y said, “But, we put it in, and we’ll probably going to then be taking it out.” At another point, he said that it would be a “very big bill” that would call for meritbased immigratio­n and include a DACA provision. He then said there would be a “road to citizenshi­p” in the executive order which he repeatedly confused with a piece of legislatio­n. Presidents cannot create a pathway to citizenshi­p without congressio­nal action.

Almost immediatel­y after Trump’s interview, a White House spokesman issued a statement that was quite different from what the president said. The statement said that Trump was working on an executive order to “establish a merit-based immigratio­n system to further protect U.S. workers,” something that the White House has been planning for weeks. The statement made clear it would not relate to DACA or a “road to citizenshi­p.”

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