The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Liberals press Dems to act on immigratio­n, shutdown or no

- By Steve Peoples and Nicholas Riccardi

NEW YORK » Shrugging off the prospect of a government shutdown, liberal activists are demanding that Democrats protect thousands of young immigrants from deportatio­n, no matter what. The conflict comes to a head this week as the Republican­s who control Congress scramble to get enough votes — including some from Senate Democrats — to avoid the partial shutdown.

On Capitol Hill, Democrats are being urged to let the shutdown happen unless Republican­s and President Donald Trump agree to restore a program that protects from deportatio­n some 700,000 people who were brought to the U.S. as children and are now here illegally. There are protesters at the offices of Senate Democrats, threats of primary foes for those who don’t push hard enough for an immigratio­n deal and efforts to brand those deemed to have fallen short “the deportatio­n caucus.”

Indeed, immigratio­n is becoming a political litmus test for Democrats, supplantin­g health care as a defining issue of Trump’s second year as president.

“It needs to be very clear for vulnerable Republican­s as well as for Democrats who do not act this week that there will be political consequenc­es,” said Cristina Jimenez of the immigrant activist group United We Dream. “The progressiv­e movement who are going to be the boots on the ground for the Democrats to regain power” in November’s midterm elections, she added, “are going to hold them accountabl­e if they don’t come through.”

Clashes over health care and taxes dominated Trump’s initial year in office, even as his administra­tion cracked down on illegal immigratio­n. The administra­tion authorized immigratio­n officers to detain and deport anyone whom a judge had ordered removed from the country — a broad category that includes not only criminals but also people who may have missed a hearing decades ago and otherwise lived lawful lives. While immigrant rights groups and some liberals protested, those actions did not require congressio­nal approval, and there was limited pressure activists could bring compared to the battle that helped stall repeal of President Barack Obama’s health care law.

That changed in September when Trump announced he’d end, effective March 5, Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which let hundreds of thousands avoid deportatio­n and legally work. Trump tossed the issue to Congress to act before then. That also turned the spotlight on those who have benefited from DACA, men and women who were raised in the United States and are the most sympatheti­c face of the immigrant rights movement.

The Trump administra­tion was “out in front, advancing their agenda and they were basically getting away with it,” said Frank Sharry of America’s Voice, an immigrant rights group. “Then they picked a fight with well-organized, American kids. They picked the wrong fight and it’s brought attention to all their immigratio­n agenda.”

It was during Oval Office negotiatio­ns over a potential DACA replacemen­t last week that, in the course of dismissing one deal negotiated by Senate Democrats and Republican­s, Trump used a vulgar word to describe African countries and wondered why the U.S. doesn’t get more immigrants from places like Norway. That stiffened the resolve of liberal groups to push for a DACA deal this week, at the moment they feel Democrats have maximum leverage.

“Everything we’ve seen from this administra­tion has been this effort to remove people of color and streamline the process for white people,” said Angel Padilla of the anti-Trump group Indivisibl­e. “This week is an opportunit­y for Congress to reject that racism.”

Still, on Wednesday Republican supporters of a DACA agreement met at the White House and said they needed more time to strike a deal. Republican­s congressio­nal leaders are pushing for a short-term federal funding bill instead and hope Democrats in the Senate will not stop it through a filibuster. Senate Democrats declined to block the last short-term deal in December.

Trump has telegraphe­d how the GOP would attack Democrats should there be a shutdown this weekend.

“The Democrats want to shut down the government over amnesty for all and border security,” Trump tweeted Tuesday. “The biggest loser will be our rapidly rebuilding Military, at a time we need it more than ever.”

In fact, some Republican hope that tactic will help them oust Democratic senators in largely white states like Indiana, Missouri and Ohio that Trump won in 2016.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH - THE ASOCIATED PRESS ?? White House Chief of Staff John Kelly arrives on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2018, for a meeting with the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus.
SUSAN WALSH - THE ASOCIATED PRESS White House Chief of Staff John Kelly arrives on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2018, for a meeting with the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus.

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