The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

DACA deadline comes and goes

- By Dan Freedman

March 5 — the longloomin­g deadline for youthful immigrant Dreamers facing loss of legal status under Obama-era DACA protection — came and went with more of a whimper than a bang.

The Dreamers who became legal under President Obama’s 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals order staged a sitdown Monday on a major thoroughfa­re in the shadows of the U.S. Capitol.

And in Hartford, Connecticu­t Students for a Dream, representi­ng the 8,000 or more immigrants in the state brought illegally to the U.S. as children, appeared alongside Sen. Richard Blumenthal to demand a solution.

“It’s heartbreak­ing,” Blumenthal said. “Thousands of Dreamers are being kept in limbo because President (Donald) Trump decided to throw a bone to his base.”

Blumenthal was referring to Trump’s cancellati­on last September of the Obama DACA order, which effectivel­y set the clock ticking down to March 5, when legal protection­s for the nation’s 700,000 or so Dreamers was set to expire. The legal status of 21,000 already has expired.

But even though Trump and Republican leaders on Capitol Hill expressed willingnes­s to compromise on DACA, Congress last month failed to forge a solution.

Trump demanded funding for his long-promised border wall and an end to “chain migration” as conditions for extending DACA, poison pills for Democrats.

With no congressio­nal majority forming around any single compromise plan, rounds of fingerpoin­ting ensued.

But crossfire appeared to be muted at least temporaril­y by court injunction­s in New York City and San Francisco that stayed Trump’s cancellati­on and allowed Dreamers to submit renewals to the Department of Homeland Security.

The U.S. Supreme Court last month refused to consider an emergency petition submitted by the Trump administra­tion, essentiall­y stalling DACA as the underlying case to preserve it wends its way through the federal court system.

Advocates from Connecticu­t Students for a Dream argued DACA recipients should remain in the shadows, notwithsta­nding the likelihood of time-consuming court litigation.

In the meantime, they argued, the state must step in and give Dreamers as much protection as the law allows.

“While Congress fails to act, we here in Connecticu­t say enough is enough and we demand that Connecticu­t take action to protect and support immigrant youth in” the state, campaign manager Camila Bortolleto said on Monday.

“We are rising up to demand that ... House and Senate leaders support undocument­ed youth in Connecticu­t by equalizing access to college for immigrant youth in our state.”

Trump placed the blame squarely on Democrats, accusing them of walking away from a deal that would have given both sides something to celebrate. White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the lack of a compromise solution on Capitol Hill was “pathetic.”

"It’s March 5th and the Democrats are nowhere to be found on DACA," Trump tweeted. “Gave them 6 months, they just don’t care. Where are they? We are ready to make a deal!”

Sen. Chris Murphy countered that Trump was being disingenuo­us.

“Dreamers and their loved ones woke up this morning with pits in their stomachs, and there’s no one to blame but President Trump,” Murphy said in a statement. “I’ve met so many incredible Dreamers in Connecticu­t and all they want is a chance to work hard and make a future in the only country they’ve ever called home. It’s time for President Trump and Republican­s in Congress to stop playing politics with their lives.”

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