The Denver Post

Trump says he’ll try again to end it

- By Michael D. Shear and Emily Cochrane

WASHINGTON» President Donald Trump said Friday that he will once again attempt to end a program designed to protect young immigrants from deportatio­n, one day after the Supreme Court said his earlier efforts to do so were arbitrary and improper.

In September 2017, Trump moved to terminate the Obamaera program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, making good on a 2016 campaign promise in which he called the program an illegal executive amnesty. On Thursday, the court said the administra­tion had not followed the rules required to

end the program, allowing it to remain in place for now.

In a tweet Friday morning, Trump vowed to try again.

“We will be submitting enhanced papers shortly in order to properly fulfill the Supreme Court’s ruling & request of yesterday,” Trump wrote.

Within moments, one of Trump’s top immigratio­n officials at the Department of Homeland Security, tweeted that the administra­tion is eager to terminate the protection­s for the young immigrants in a way that will pass muster with the court.

“We are on it at @DHSgov Mr. President!” wrote Kenneth Cuccinelli, a deputy secretary at the department and one of the president’s most hard-line immigratio­n advisers.

Cracking down on illegal immigratio­n was at the heart of the president’s first campaign, and Trump has spent much of the last three years waging an assault on the nation’s immigratio­n system in an attempt to reduce the number of foreigners in the U.S.

The decision to end DACA was a centerpiec­e of those efforts. Put in place by former President Barack Obama, the program allows about 800,000 young immigrants who were brought to the United States as children to live and work legally without the threat of immediate deportatio­n.

Surveys show that most Americans — including a majority of Republican­s — support allowing the young immigrants, known as Dreamers, to stay. But the president’s hard-line advisers, including Stephen Miller, the architect of his immigratio­n agenda, have urged the president to follow through on his promise to his conservati­ve supporters.

A new effort to kill the program would draw another legal challenge that would be unlikely to be settled before the election. Trump’s announceme­nt that he intends to again seek an end to the DACA protection­s sent a clear message to Capitol Hill, where top lawmakers acknowledg­ed that legislativ­e action will be needed to permanentl­y address the fate of the group of young immigrants.

“It grants a reprieve, obviously, for the Dreamers, which again, I think is very important and necessary,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski, RAlaska, said of the ruling. “But I also recognize that it then reminds us that it’s back in the lap of those of us here in Congress.”

But veterans of the recent, fierce battles over immigratio­n have expressed skepticism that the deeply divided lawmakers could reach consensus on broad immigratio­n legislatio­n in the months before the fall elections. Repeated efforts to negotiate an immigratio­n deal between Democratic lawmakers and Trump in the last three years have all collapsed.

In January 2018, Trump appeared ready to embrace a bipartisan deal that would have given permanent, legal status to the young immigrants in exchange for border security enhancemen­ts and other immigratio­n changes. But the possibilit­y of a deal collapsed after an Oval Office meeting in which the president’s hardline advisers rebelled against it and Trump asked “why would we want all these people from shithole countries?”

Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, said that immigratio­n reform was “worth a try — I’ve been trying for 20 years” and that he didn’t want “to walk away from any opportunit­y.” In a letter to Trump signed by Durbin and 40 other Democratic senators, Durbin urged the president not to end DACA.

“We must ensure these talented young immigrants are not forced to stop working when the need for their public service has never been greater. And we must give them the chance they deserve to become American citizens,” the senators wrote.

But some Republican­s were not optimistic.

“Comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform has never worked, at least not in the time I’ve been here,” Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, told reporters on Thursday. “So I think what we need to do is figure out how to take it in bite-sized pieces and deal with it incrementa­lly. I think if we did that on, on the DACA issue — because of the sympatheti­c nature of their plight — I think we’d have a better chance.”

Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the minority leader, said he disagreed with the court ruling and “it just re-emphasizes that the House and Senate needs to do their work.”

For more than two years, the DACA program has been essentiall­y frozen — people who had applied before September 2017 were still protected from deportatio­n and allowed to work legally. But new applicants to the program were prohibited while the courts debated the program.

Now, immigratio­n advocates said they expected the program to resume full operations, though the administra­tion has not made any formal announceme­nt.

The president appears to be following the same playbook he used when courts blocked his efforts to impose a travel ban early in his administra­tion. After two versions of the ban were rejected, the Supreme Court approved a third version, which remains in effect.

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