The Record (Troy, NY)

Court strikes down Trump policy

- Email Cynthia Tucker at cynthia@cynthiatuc­ker.com

You’d think that any American president would be delighted to welcome hardworkin­g and ambitious young adults clamoring to join the American family. But President Donald J. Trump has been openly hostile to black and brown people he could paint as “other” — dangerous, lazy, lawless, un-American.

Resurrecti­ng the rage, resentment and racism of George Wallace for an era in which immigratio­n has changed the nation’s demographi­cs, Trump has created concentrat­ion camps at the southern border, bottleneck­ed asylum requests and deported people for traffic offenses. He has even gone after the young adults known as “Dreamers,” mostly darker-skinned residents who are citizens in every way but the most technical: They weren’t born here.

Happily, in another stunning defeat for the Trump administra­tion, the U.S. Supreme Court has halted the president’s attempt to deport them to countries they don’t remember, to cultures they don’t consider their own, to communitie­s in which they could not speak the language. That’s a triumph not only for the 700,000 or so who can continue to pursue their dreams, but also for the rest of us. They make the nation stronger.

According to one study, more than 90% of Dreamers have jobs. Many have gone to college, majoring in fields from early childhood education to computer science. By some estimates, upward of 25,000 of them are employed in health care, where workers are desperatel­y needed. Nearly a thousand are veterans or currently serving in the U.S. Armed Forces.

Yet, they are still in limbo since the Supreme Court’s ruling merely stays Trump’s hand for now. That means Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, should come out campaignin­g hard on immigratio­n reform in general — and keeping the Dreamers in particular. Even in this deeply polarized era, polls show broad bipartisan support for allowing the Dreamers to stay.

President Barack Obama enacted the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program after he could not persuade a GOPcontrol­led U.S. Senate to pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform. The rules for eligibilit­y are stringent. When the program was started in 2012, it required that Dreamers must have come to the U.S. before their 16th birthday.

They had to have high school diplomas, be enrolled in school or be veterans. They could not have criminal records. The program doesn’t provide a path to citizenshi­p or permanent residentia­l status, but it defers deportatio­n and allows its beneficiar­ies to gain a social security card and a driver’s license so they can work, drive and travel without fear.

Still, Trumpists detest the program. Jeff Sessions, who wants to curb even legal immigratio­n, attacked DACA when he was attorney general. The president himself once tweeted: “Many of the people in DACA, no longer very young, are far from ‘angels.’ Some are very tough, hardened criminals” — a malicious falsehood.

As Obama belatedly came to understand, a Republican Party that had long been complicit in illegal immigratio­n — if not exactly welcoming toward brown newcomers — had turned belligeren­t toward the undocument­ed.

The Republican Party spent decades pandering to white Americans who were uncomforta­ble with the changes wrought by the civil rights movement, courting a racially resentful cadre of white voters with code words and stereotype­s, and placating those voters by pretending to elevate their interests. By the dawn of the 21st century, the party had caved to its most racist elements. The GOP relies on the votes of a hardy band of haters who don’t believe that Mexicans or Guatemalan­s or Haitians or Ghanaians belong here.

Those xenophobic Republican­s clearly are not troubled by white immigrants, considerin­g that Trump is married to one. First Lady Melania Trump was born in Slovenia and moved to the United States in 1996. (She is the second immigrant to whom Trump has been married. His first wife, Ivana Trump, emigrated from Czechoslov­akia.) Furthermor­e, Melania Trump brought her parents over by taking advantage of rules that allow naturalize­d adults to sponsor residency for family members — the “chain migration” that Trump has decried publicly.

If Trump were a pragmatic politician, he’d drop his opposition to the Dreamers. But his presidency has been built on racial resentment, and he can hardly change course now. That’s all the more reason for immigrants and their advocates to help defeat him in November.

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 ??  ?? Cynthia Tucker As I See It
Cynthia Tucker As I See It

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