Trump likely to rescind Obama 'Dreamer'
program: media reports
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[August 26, 2017]
By Julia Harte
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump is likely to rescind an Obama-era policy that protects
nearly 600,000 immigrants who entered the country illegally as children
and are known as "Dreamers," according to media reports on Friday.
Trump's decision on whether to end the Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals, or DACA, policy could be announced as early as next week,
reported ABC News, citing multiple sources.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions discussed the program with senior White
House officials on Thursday, according to an administration official.
Department of Homeland Security spokesman David Lapan denied reports
that the department had made any recommendations on DACA to the White
House. "There have been continuing discussions about DACA but nothing
has been determined," Lapan told Reuters.
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White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters on Friday that
the program continues to be under review. A White House spokesperson
told Reuters that only Congress can legislate a permanent solution for
the plight of children who are currently protected from deportation by
DACA.
Trump had pledged on the election campaign trail to scrap all of former
President Barack Obama's executive orders on immigration, including
DACA.
Immigrant advocates reacted to the news with a flurry of statements,
promising to defend the program with protest and legal action.
“Immigrant youth fought to create the DACA program and we will fight
like hell to defend it,” said Greisa Martinez Rosas, Advocacy Director
and DACA-beneficiary of United We Dream said in a statement.
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![](../images/082617pics/news_e11.jpg)
Students wait in line for assistance with paperwork for the Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals program at the Coalition for Humane
Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California, August
15, 2012. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn
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Civil rights groups said ending the program could increase racial
divisions in the country in the wake of the recent violence in
Charlottesville.
Ten Republican state attorneys general in June urged the Trump
administration to rescind the DACA program, while noting that the
government did not have to revoke permits that had already been
issued.
If the federal government did not withdraw DACA by Sept. 5, the
attorneys general said they would file a legal challenge to the
program in a Texas federal court.
The 10 who signed the letter represent Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho,
Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and
West Virginia.
A larger coalition of 26 Republican attorneys general had challenged
the Obama-era policy covering illegal immigrant parents, known as
DAPA, that had been blocked by the courts before it took effect. The
Department of Homeland Security rescinded that policy earlier this
year.
(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg, Julia Harte, Dan Levine, and David
Shepardson; Editing by Sandra Maler and James Dalgleish)
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