Orlando Sentinel

DACA is dividing some immigrants

Those who came as kids but couldn’t apply are resentful

- By Cindy Carcamo and Brittny Mejia

LOS ANGELES — Since Sam Paredes crossed into the U.S. illegally from Mexico nearly 30 years ago, he followed a simple philosophy of keeping his head down and trying to stay out of trouble.

Paredes, 39, put in long hours for little pay as an office manager at a clothing wholesaler. He paid his taxes and hoped that after many years of waiting, there would come a way to grant him a path to becoming a U.S. citizen.

But one glimmer of hope afforded many young immigrants escaped him: Because the New York resident came too long ago, he did not qualify for immigratio­n relief under the Obama administra­tion’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Now he watches as the White House and Congress continue to negotiate and argue — but at least talk about — the future of DACA beneficiar­ies.

“I’m very bitter. These DACA kids definitely have this sense of entitlemen­t,” Paredes said. “People fought for them and they got DACA and they got their work permit and then they went to sleep, instead of working to fight for the rest of us.”

As the Senate debates immigratio­n in a race to come up with a plan that would win bipartisan support, the future for the so-called Dreamers has gained even more prominence. What to do about DACA helped to spark a brief federal government shutdown and prompted House Minority leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to give an eight-hour speech.

Even President Donald Trump has occasional­ly softened his frequently harsh, hard-line immigratio­n tone when talking about DACA recipients. In a Twitter post, the president said, “Republican­s want to fix DACA far more than the Democrats do.”

On Feb. 14, Trump pushed senators to oppose any bill that did not support his tough approach to immigratio­n, including closing the country’s doors to many immigrants who want to come to the U.S. legally. A day earlier, a second federal judge issued an injunction ordering his administra­tion to continue the DACA program — a decision the Trump administra­tion wants reversed.

But the young immigrants will continue to be front and center in the debate over immigratio­n, no matter what.

There are many reasons the DACA beneficiar­ies have moved to the center of the debate about illegal immigratio­n. Many point out that they are here illegally through no fault of their own, brought as children by their parents. Many of them have gone on to college and public service, making them ideal poster children in the debate.

But the focus on the immigrants has caused tension between those in the community who can qualify for DACA and those who cannot.

Alessandro Negrete, 35, was getting ready for a night out in downtown Los Angeles recently when one of his friends worried aloud about Trump taking away the protection he got from the DACA program.

Negrete, a public relations worker, was 3 months old when a smuggler carried him from Mexico into the United States. Too old now to apply for DACA protection, he said he cannot help but feel resentment at how much attention the plight of this one segment of the immigrant community is receiving while people like him seem to get so little.

“You think you have it hard?” he angrily told his friend. “You at least have legal status. For some people like me, my mom and some of my neighbors, we don’t have (that).”

This month, Hilario Yanez, a DACA beneficiar­y and immigrant rights activist, went on the TV show “Fox & Friends” and expressed his support for Trump’s legislatio­n, saying he believed that the president has shown “leadership and compassion toward” him and other immigrants.

“Here’s a guy who wants to provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for myself and really make a difference in my life,” said Yanez, a technology analyst at Accenture Technology in Houston.

At the same time he sparked outrage in the immigrant rights movement, with some saying that Yanez embodies the extreme stereotype of entitlemen­t among some DACA beneficiar­ies

Karla Estrada, a DACA beneficiar­y and longtime immigrant rights activist who lives in Los Angeles, said Yanez’s comments come as no surprise.

“For months now, everyone has been freaking out. As things have been getting ugly and desperate, the divide between DACA recipients has become more prevalent,” Estrada said.

One group wants clean legislatio­n that will provide a path to citizenshi­p for DACA beneficiar­ies but with no strings attached. The second group is willing to take whatever they can get as long as they get some sort of immigratio­n relief, Estrada said.

Although Estrada is lobbying for legislatio­n with no strings attached, she said she’s trying hard to understand why other DACA beneficiar­ies would be willing to compromise.

“I truly believe that desperatio­n has led some of us to the degree, I’m hoping, of temporary insanity. They see no other option. They see no other door,” she said. “It’s very dishearten­ing and sad. We’re supposed to be a united community and we obviously are not.”

Although DACA is scheduled to end in March, activists and legislator­s, including some Republican­s, have rallied to support the program.

This comes as many of the approximat­ely 11 million immigrants in the country illegally feel painted as criminals and DACA beneficiar­ies are being leveraged by the Trump administra­tion to achieve concession­s from Democrats on stricter border security and tougher immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Some immigratio­n hardliners say they hold a soft spot for DACA beneficiar­ies because they were brought at a young age. But many are not pleased with Trump’s plan to legalize their presence.

“He ran on a platform to build the border wall and strong border security. So it was an unpleasant surprise to border control activists, like myself,” said Robin Hvidston, executive director of We the People Rising, a Claremont, Calif., organizati­on that lobbies for stricter immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“President Trump never mentioned this plan while he was campaignin­g for votes,” Hvidston said.

If DACA legislatio­n does pass, Hvidston said she believes it’s only a matter of time before that group then advocates for those left out.

“The overall impression is that DACA recipients are the champions of those here illegally,” she said.

 ?? CHRISTINA HOUSE/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Sergio Hernandez, 19, right, who is a DACA recipient, and his sister Abril, 16, visit their mother Sandra. Sandra Hernandez can’t remedy her legal status.
CHRISTINA HOUSE/LOS ANGELES TIMES Sergio Hernandez, 19, right, who is a DACA recipient, and his sister Abril, 16, visit their mother Sandra. Sandra Hernandez can’t remedy her legal status.

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