President
Donald Trump plans to announce Tuesday his decision on whether to end an
amnesty for hundreds of thousands of people brought to America illegally as
minors
and who for the most part are thoroughly integrated into US society.
TRUMP His predecessor Barack Obama implemented the s0-called DACA program —
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — five years ago to help bring these
young immigrants out of the shadows of illegality, permitting them to study and
work without fear. The debate over DACA has been intense on both sides.
For
days White House officials have insisted that numerous options are under study,
warning against any hasty conclusions before the official announcement. But one
reporting line has repeatedly surfaced: that the US president, determined to
keep a central pledge to his political base to fight illegal immigration, plans
to end the symbolically important program after a six-month delay intended to
give Congress time to find a solution for the approximately 800,000 “Dreamers,”
most of them from Latin America. Several Republican lawmakers have warned
against the temptation to cancel the popular program outright, a decision that
could lead to the expulsion of many Dreamers. Republican Senator James Lankford
of Oklahoma summed up the concern of many, saying that “we as Americans do not
hold children legally accountable for the actions of their parents.” But the
prospects of a badly divided Congress reaching a compromise in months on a
subject that has eluded agreement for years — immigration — seem dim. Trump,
despite his inflammatory campaign-trail diatribes against immigration, has
publicly agonized and equivocated over the fate of the young immigrants since
arriving in the White House. Calling his decision one of the most difficult
facing him, he has promised to deal with DACA with “great heart.” “We love the
Dreamers,” he said Friday during a brief exchange with reporters in the Oval
Office.
He added, “We love everybody.” – Silicon Valley headwinds – Trump
advisers indicated over the weekend that the president’s decision would be
guided as well by economic considerations. The president “wants to do what’s
fair to the American worker, what’s fair to people in this country who are
competing for jobs,” Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway told Fox News. Much of the
business world, and particularly the high-tech firms of California’s Silicon
Valley, stands firmly against a DACA repeal. The program offers the equivalent
of a residence permit — renewable every two years — to young people who were
under 16 when they arrived and who have no criminal record.
Facebook founder
Mark Zuckerberg changed his profile on the social network on Saturday, adding a
simple message to his photo: “#Here to Stay — I support DACA.” CEO Tim Cook
similarly offered strong backing for the 250 of his colleagues at Apple who are
Dreamers. “I stand with them,” he said.
“They deserve our respect as equals and
a solution rooted in American values.” Trump’s widely awaited decision might
also prompt Obama to speak out. During his final White House news conference,
on January 18, Obama said he wanted to stay out of the spotlight, but he also
listed the conditions that might cause him to break his silence if the
country’s “fundamental values” were under threat. “I would put in that category
efforts to round up kids who have grown up here and for all practical purposes
are American kids and send them someplace else,” Obama said, noting that many
were attending community colleges or even serving in the military. “The notion that
we would just arbitrarily, or because of politics, punish those kids when they
didn’t do anything wrong themselves, I think, would be something that would
merit me speaking out.”
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