Los Angeles Times

Trump criticizes judge’s DACA ruling

The court decision may complicate lawmakers’ attempts to help ‘Dreamers.’

- By Lisa Mascaro and Brian Bennett lisa.mascaro@latimes.com brian.bennett@latimes.com Times staff writer Patrick McGreevy in Sacramento contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — A federal judge’s decision to stop President Trump from ending protection­s for so-called Dreamers offered the young immigrants a temporary reprieve but may have stalled the urgency in Congress toward a more lasting legislativ­e solution.

The president on Wednesday denounced the federal courts as “broken and unfair” after a district judge in San Francisco issued a temporary ruling keeping the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in place, despite Trump’s decision to end it this year. The administra­tion vowed to request a stay and appeal.

But the nationwide preliminar­y injunction produced crosscurre­nts in Congress, where lawmakers have been meeting franticall­y in bipartisan groups to come up with deportatio­n protection­s for some 700,000 immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children and have been working, attending school or serving in the military.

Pressure had been mounting for Congress to broker a deal by Jan. 19 as part of a must-pass budget package to fund the government. That motivation could slip after the federal judge’s order, giving opponents an opening for continued delay.

“This is a huge step forward, but the fight is not over,” said California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, who filed the lawsuit.

“The real question now turns to the Congress and the president. Will they act?” Becerra said. “It is time for Congress to give us a lasting solution that will leave no doubt that the Dreamers are Americans and that they are here to stay.”

Advocates for immigrants say more than 120 DACA recipients a day have already lost protected status, a number that is expected to swell to 1,000 in March if Trump’s decision to end the program is allowed.

Adrian Reyna, a Dreamer and immigratio­n activist, promised that Dreamers would continue flooding Capitol Hill offices as they have for weeks warning Congress about inaction.

“Don’t let anyone tell you the urgency to get this done is not real,” said Reyna, the Dream Act campaign director at United We Dream, a leading advocacy group. “The clock is ticking. People have already lost protection­s.”

On Tuesday night, U.S. District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco temporaril­y blocked the Trump administra­tion’s decision to phase out DACA.

Alsup granted a request by the state of California, the University of California and other plaintiffs to stop Trump from ending DACA as planned on March 5.

The administra­tion’s decision to end DACA, which was announced in September, was based on a “flawed” legal analysis, Alsup wrote in his decision.

Dreamers would be irreparabl­y harmed if their DACA protection­s, which allow them to live and work legally in the U.S., were stripped away before the courts had a chance to fully consider their claims, he ruled.

“It just shows everyone how broken and unfair our court system is when the opposing side in a case (such as DACA) always runs to the 9th Circuit and almost always wins before being reversed by higher courts,” Trump wrote in a tweet.

The White House suggested the court’s ruling would make a legislativ­e deal harder to obtain.

“We find this decision to be outrageous,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. “An issue of this magnitude must go through the normal legislativ­e process.”

In announcing his intent to end the Obama-era program, which he viewed as an abuse of executive power, Trump also pushed Congress to develop a legislativ­e fix, speaking favorably of the young immigrants and suggesting he did not necessaril­y want them to be deported.

One simple solution pushed by Democrats would be passage of the Dream Act, a bill that would give the young immigrants a path to legal status, and eventual citizenshi­p, if they continued to be law-abiding.

Republican­s in Congress, who mostly oppose DACA, are angling for a broader deal that would include elements of Trump’s promised border wall with Mexico and other immigratio­n reforms they are seeking.

Top conservati­ves, including Rush Limbaugh, warned Republican­s off any deal that would include legal status — often derided as “amnesty” — for those here illegally.

Leaders of both parties met Wednesday in House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s office to negotiate what Republican­s called a timeline toward a deal.

“March the 5th is sort of the ultimate deadline, and we’d like to try to get organized so we can get to work. Everybody wants to get to a solution,” said Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the GOP whip, as he headed toward the session.

Others expected more substantia­l talks would emerge in the Senate, where a bipartisan group of six senators has been working for months on a package that could pass both chambers.

“We have made real progress,” said Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) after the group met again Wednesday behind closed doors. “It’s time for us to meet the president’s challenge and to create a law which solves this problem.”

Congress often works best when facing a deadline. Just a day earlier, Trump had convened 20 lawmakers at the White House that resulted in four priorities as the contours of a possible deal.

That deal would include beefed-up border security and other changes to immigratio­n law in exchange for permanent protection­s for Dreamers.

Republican­s also want to impose new limits on family reunificat­ion by preventing newly legal immigrants from applying to bring their family members to the United States.

Efforts to limit this socalled chain migration for spouses and children have largely been opposed by Democrats, but a 2013 bipartisan immigratio­n overhaul bill in the Senate included tweaks that would have restricted immigrants’ siblings from being eligible.

Democrats also are considerin­g a Republican proposal to overhaul the diversity lottery that Trump also wants to end.

It would transfer some, if not all, of the 50,000 annual visas that are available in a lottery system to immigrants now in the United States under temporary protective status.

That could help some of the more than 200,000 Salvadoran immigrants who must leave the country after the Trump administra­tion said it would end the program.

But the two sides remain far apart on the details of a compromise, especially as Trump insists on as much as $18 billion for his promised border wall — a nonstarter for Democrats.

“We need the wall,” Trump said following his meeting Wednesday with Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg at the White House. “Any solution has to include the wall. Without the wall it all doesn’t work.”

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP, with Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), left, and Rep. Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.), said the federal court system was “broken and unfair.”
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP, with Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), left, and Rep. Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.), said the federal court system was “broken and unfair.”

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