Lodi News-Sentinel

Aide: Trump won’t support plan to save ‘Dreamers’

- By Franco Ordonez MCCLATCHY WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON — The White House signaled this week that President Donald Trump will not support a new bipartisan plan to protect young undocument­ed immigrants — so-called Dreamers — from being placed back in line for deportatio­n.

A White House official told McClatchy that Trump would not sign a new DREAM Act being crafted by a bipartisan team led by Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Dick Durbin, D-Ill.

Graham and Durbin planned to re-introduce a version of the long-stalled legislatio­n as early as Thursday that would provide an escape hatch for young immigrants who are likely to lose their special protected status because of a court challenge from Texas and nine other states.

“It’s enforcemen­t first. Then we can get to all these other things,” said the White House official, who would not speak publicly because of the sensitivit­y of the discussion­s.

Trump’s opposition to the proposal could dash one of the greatest hopes for Congress to help the roughly 800,000 young immigrants who had been protected by President Barack Obama’s controvers­ial 2012 deferred action program, known as DACA, that is unlikely to withstand the legal challenge. But the White House official said Trump’s priority is on measures that crack down on illegal immigratio­n as he promised during the campaign.

The president instead favors a pair of already-introduced measures that would cut down on illegal and legal immigratio­n, the official said. One goes after sanctuary cities, or jurisdicti­ons that refuse to hold immigrants in their jails longer so federal officials can pick them up to be deported. The other is a “merit-based system” proposal that would reduce overall legal immigratio­n and redirect visas toward immigrants with special skills.

The White House official said the enforcemen­t proposals fit the president’s commitment to “improving the security, wages and job prospects” of American workers.

It’s also a return to the tone and theme of his campaign, in which he promised to build a wall, boost deportatio­ns and eliminate the deferred action program. He has since said he wants to “work something out” for the Dreamers, but was still expected to cancel the program to send a message to supporters who feel Obama wrongly granted amnesty to hundreds of thousands of immigrants here illegally.

“To me, it’s one of the most difficult subjects I have because you have these incredible kids — in many cases, not in all cases,” Trump said during a February news conference. “In some of the cases, they’re having DACA and they’re gang members and they’re drug members, too. But you have some absolutely incredible kids — I would say mostly — they were brought in here in such a way. It’s a very, very tough subject.”

Aboard Air Force One last week, talking with reporters en route to Paris, Trump said he was still agonizing over what to do about DACA.

“It’s a decision that I make and it’s a decision that’s very, very hard to make,” he said. “I really understand the situation now. I understand the situation very well. What I’d like to do is a comprehens­ive immigratio­n plan. But our country and political forces are not ready yet.”

He added, “There are two sides of a story. It’s always tough.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States