Tempo

Trump backs citizenshi­p for 1.8M

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – US President Trump is offering a path to citizenshi­p for up to 1.8 million young illegal immigrants but insists on measures that would curb some legal immigratio­n programs and provide a border wall with Mexico, senior White House officials said on Thursday.

The White House offered to more than double the number of “Dreamers” – people brought to the country illegally as children – who would be protected from deportatio­n, describing it as a major concession aimed at attracting enough votes for an immigratio­n deal from Democrats.

But the plan comes with significan­t strings attached to appeal to Republican­s, including requiremen­ts to slash family sponsorshi­p of immigrants, tighten border security and provide billions of dollars in funding for a border wall with Mexico that Trump made one of his major campaign promises.

The package was immediatel­y panned by pro-immigratio­n groups, which said the plan was a bad trade-off. It was also slammed by some conservati­ve groups, which decried the expansion of “amnesty” for illegal immigrants.

The head of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus, Democratic Representa­tive Michelle Lujan Grisham, said the Trump plan used Dreamers as “bargaining chips for sweeping anti-immigrant policies.”

Early reaction from Republican­s in the Senate – where the plan may receive a vote in early February – was positive. Conservati­ve Republican Senator Tom Cotton called the plan “generous and humane, while also being responsibl­e.” Republican­s narrowly control the chamber by 51-49 and need Democratic votes to pass legislatio­n.

The fight over protection­s for Dreamers, which are set to expire in March, was part of the standoff between Republican­s and Democrats in the Senate that resulted in a three-day government shutdown that ended on Monday.

They agreed to extend funding until Feb. 8, leaving a small window to come to a deal on immigratio­n. Trump’s plan will help provide guidance for those talks, Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said in a statement.

Negotiatio­ns will be tough. Democratic Senator Dick Durbin, who has championed the cause of the Dreamers, said the plan put Trump’s “entire hardline immigratio­n agenda – including massive cuts to legal immigratio­n – on the backs of these young people.”

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