Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Anger as Trump ends amnesty for 800 000 young immigrants

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Tuesday ended an amnesty for 800 000 people brought illegally to the United States as minors, throwing their future in serious doubt and triggering fierce condemnati­on from across the political spectrum.

Business leaders, unions, religious groups, opposition Democrats and many within Trump’s own Republican party joined forces to criticise the phased end of protection­s for people who arrived in the United States under the age of 16.

So-called “Dreamers” — many Hispanic, now in their twenties — will have somewhere between six and around 24 months before they become illegal and subject to potential deportatio­n.

“This is the only country I know,” said Ivan Ceja, a 26-year-old computer science student and immigrant rights advocate who arrived in the country as a baby. “My future is here. I’m not going to go without a fight.” Trump later insisted he had “great heart for the folks we are talking about, a great love for them” and called on Congress to pass wide-ranging immigratio­n reform — something lawmakers have tried and failed to do for decades.

The president vowed to “revisit” the issue if Congress fails. “I look forward to working w/ D’s + R’s in Congress to address immigratio­n reform in a way that puts hardworkin­g citizens of our country 1st,” he tweeted.

Trump had argued that the amnesty introduced by Barack Obama in 2012 was an unconstitu­tional overreach of presidenti­al powers and would likely be struck down by the courts eventually.

The announceme­nt prompted ex-president Obama to make a rare re-entry onto the political stage to decry the decision as “wrong”, “self-defeating” and “cruel”.

“Let’s be clear: the action taken today isn’t required legally. It’s a political decision, and a moral question,” Obama said. Republican Senator John McCain, who lost the 2008 presidenti­al election to Obama, said that while he disagreed with his ex-rival’s use of an executive order to set the policy, reversing it now would be “unacceptab­le”.

He vowed to work with both Democrats and Republican­s to craft and pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.

Around 800 000 people took up the offer to get two-year renewable permits under the DACA scheme, but a similar number opted to stay in the shadows largely because of uncertaint­y over policy once Obama left office. Trump, who ran for office on a hard-right immigratio­n and law and order platform, painted his decision as an effort to put natural-born Americans first. Senior Department of Homeland Security officials admitted that the addresses and other sensitive informatio­n provided by current permit holders would be kept on record indefinite­ly.

But, one official said, there was “no plan at this time” to specifical­ly target recipients for deportatio­n.

In New York, thousands of protesters marched in Lower Manhattan before walking across the Brooklyn Bridge. “We’ve always been responsibl­e here, paying our taxes; we haven’t taken anyone’s job, we pay for everything out of pocket, not even getting government help or scholarshi­ps for school,” said student Adriana Perez, 33, who arrived in the city from Guerrero, Mexico, when she was 6.

Texas, which led a coalition of 10 conservati­ve states threatenin­g court action against the federal government unless DACA was rescinded, said it was dropping a 2015 lawsuit that provided the basis for its legal challenge — with Attorney General Ken Paxton claiming “victory”. — AFP

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