Arab Times

Congress takes up fate of ‘Dreamers’

Trump support vital

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WASHINGTON, Feb 12, (AP): The Senate begun a rare, open-ended debate on immigratio­n and the fate of the “Dreamer” immigrants on Monday, and Republican senators say they’ll introduce President Donald Trump’s plan. Though his proposal has no chance of passage, Trump may be the most influentia­l voice in the conversati­on.

If the aim is to pass a legislativ­e solution, Trump will be a crucial and, at times, complicati­ng player. His dayto-day turnabouts on the issues have confounded Democrats and Republican­s and led some to urge the White House to minimize his role in the debate for fear he’ll say something that undermines the effort.

Yet his ultimate support will be vital if Congress is to overcome election-year pressures against compromise. No Senate deal is likely to see the light of day in the more conservati­ve House without the president’s blessing and promise to sell compromise to his hard-line base. Trump, thus far, has balked on that front. “The Tuesday Trump versus the Thursday Trump, after the base gets to him,” is how Sen Jeff Flake, R-Ariz. a proponent of compromise, describes the president and the impact conservati­ve voters and his hard-right advisers have on him. “I don’t know how far he’ll go, but I do think he’d like to fix it.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., scheduled an initial procedural vote for Monday evening to commence debate. It is expected to succeed easily, and then the Senate will sort through proposals, perhaps for weeks.

Democrats and some Republican­s say they want to help the “Dreamers,” young immigrants who have lived in the US illegally since they were children and have only temporaril­y been protected from deportatio­n by an Obama-era program. Trump has said he wants to aid them and has even proposed a path to citizenshi­p for 1.8 million, but in exchange wants $25 billion for his proposed US-Mexico border wall plus significan­t curbs to legal immigratio­n.

McConnell agreed to the open-ended debate, a Senate rarity in recent years, after Democrats agreed to vote to end a three-day government shutdown they’d forced over the issue. They’d initially demanded a deal toward helping Dreamers, not a simple promise of votes.

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