Los Angeles Times

No good reason to end DACA

Booting out ‘Dreamers’ would be cruel and wouldn’t fix the deep flaws in the immigratio­n system.

- T would be

Icoldheart­ed indeed if President Trump were to end the Obama administra­tion’s policy of not deporting immigrants who were brought illegally to the United States as children. Yes, illegal immigratio­n is a problem; yes, the United States has the right to control who comes in and out of the country; yes, there are people in the U.S. who ought to be deported. But telling people who were raised here and educated here (thanks to decisions made by their elders) and whose dreams are rooted here that that they are no longer welcome — that would be an inhumane act. These people, many now adults, should not be forced to pay the price for the choices of their parents.

The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program — which Trump is considerin­g killing, according to White House leaks — was designed to give stability to people whose undocument­ed status is no fault of their own. Some arrived here as newborns or toddlers, and in many cases didn’t even realize they had no legal status until they needed a Social Security number for a job or documentat­ion to prove their eligibilit­y for their first driver’s license. Others have known from a young age, and have learned to live as quasi-fugitives, afraid to be questioned by police or, even worse, by ICE agents. Since President Obama created the program by executive action in August 2012, roughly 750,000 people have received deferments that allow them to live and work in the U.S. without fear of deportatio­n. (The deferments do not grant citizenshi­p or legal residency.) By what calculatio­n is it in the best interest of the country to eliminate their deferments and make them eligible for deportatio­n?

Despite the assertions of many of Trump’s supporters, DACA is not an amnesty program (because it offers no permanent relief). It allows some breathing room for people caught up in circumstan­ces not of their own making until Congress can figure out a humane reboot of the nation’s dysfunctio­nal immigratio­n system. To receive DACA protection, applicants must be enrolled in or have graduated from high school or college, or have been honorably discharged from the armed services; they must have been under age 31 as of June 15, 2012, and have arrived in the U.S. before turning 16; and they must have no significan­t criminal conviction and not be a member of a gang, among other criteria. Those are reasonable safeguards that help ensure that deferments don’t go to people who threaten public safety or national security.

Trump, who has wavered on the issue, still has a choice. He can show compassion for deserving people who have in many cases lived most of their lives among us. Or he can follow the darker impulses of some of his supporters, and shatter the dreams of hundreds of thousands of people who have done us no harm, and who could do us much good.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States