Yorkshire Post

Trump expected to end scheme that protects child immigrants

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PRESIDENT DONALD Trump is expected to announce that he will end protection for young immigrants who were brought into the country illegally as children, but with a six-month delay.

The delay in the formal dismantlin­g of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) programme would be intended to give Congress time to decide whether it wants to address the status of the so-called Dreamers in legislatio­n.

But it was not immediatel­y clear how the six-month delay would work in practice and what would happen to people who currently have work permits under the programme, or whose permits expire during the six-month stretch.

It also was unclear exactly what would happen if Congress failed to pass a measure by the considered deadline.

The president, who has been grappling with the issue for months, has been known to change his mind in the past and could still shift course.

Mr Trump has been wrestling for months with what to do about the Obama-era Daca programme, which has given nearly 800,000 young immigrants a reprieve from deportatio­n and the ability to work legally in the form of twoyear, renewable work permits.

The White House faces a Tuesday deadline set by Republican state officials threatenin­g to sue the Trump administra­tion if the president did not end the programme.

The deadline comes as Mr Trump finds himself increasing­ly under fire, with his poll ratings at near-record lows. He would like to take measures to appease his supporters who are immigratio­n hardliners but the children are undoubtedl­y the most sympatheti­c immigrants in the US.

Many have no memories of or connection­s to the countries they were born in.

During his campaign, Mr Trump criticised Daca as illegal “amnesty” and vowed to eliminate the programme the day he took office. But since his election, he has wavered on the issue, at one point saying those affected could “rest easy”.

The Obama administra­tion created the programme in 2012 as a stopgap to protect some young immigrants from deportatio­n.

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