Miami Herald

Business leaders meet in Miami to discuss a solution,

- BY JIMENA TAVEL jtavel@miamiheral­d.com

As the longest government shutdown in American history nears its fourth week, business leaders from across the nation met in Miami to discuss a bipartisan solution for immigratio­n reform and possibly ending the impasse.

Representa­tives of the American Business Immigratio­n Coalition, a nationwide group of advocates for immigrant rights, gathered for a twoday retreat Tuesday and Wednesday. The coalition leaders spoke to Miami Dade College students, many of whom are imasking migrants or recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program.

They talked with Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Miami., on Tuesday.

The business heads called on politician­s to make a deal. They want Democrats to approve funding for President Donald Trump’s wall in exchange for people under the DACA and Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to gain permanent legal status.

“This is a win-win solution,” said William C. Kunkler III, a coalition leader from Illinois. “All we’re is for our elected officials to do their job. As business people, we want to get things done.”

Although the leaders list building a better immigratio­n system as a long-term goal of their coalition, they don’t believe Trump’s wall is a solution. They believe the term “wall,” in fact, is divisive. But they do think Democrats should give Trump $5.7 billion for the wall — as long as they get DACA and TPS in return.

In 2017, Trump terminated DACA, the Obama program that allowed children who were brought to this country by their illegal immigrant parents a chance to stay here lawfully. The matter is now before the courts.

The Department of Homeland Security has tried to terminate TPS for thousands of immigrants who have been able to live and work legally in the United States, often for decades, due to hardships in their countries. The proposed terminatio­n primarily would affect those who have come from the Caribbean, Central America and some African countries. The courts are reviewing the issue.

Mike Fernandez, a Cuban-American billionair­e healthcare executive who is one of the coalition leaders, said he sees the dreamers and the TPS beneficiar­ies as people who have their backs to the wall in front of a firing squad. He wants to focus on helping them, even if that means giving Trump money for the wall.

“So be it,” said Fernandez, a Republican mega-donor who left the party after Donald Trump was elected president in 2016.

Fernandez said the coalition leaders don’t believe the Southern border is going through a crisis, as Trump has insisted. Instead, he said the shutdown is causing far more serious consequenc­es in airports. Having TSA employees call in sick is “dangerous” and opens a window for a terrorist to possibly get through, he said.

“All it takes is one incident, and we’re going to be sorry that we’ve acted this way,” Fernandez said.

Kunkler said from an economic viewpoint, the United States needs a good relationsh­ip with Mexico to transport goods back and forth easily.

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