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		U.S. House approves protections for 'Dreamer' and farmworker immigrants
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		 [March 19, 2021] 
		By Susan Cornwell and Richard Cowan 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of 
		Representatives on Thursday passed bills providing a pathway to 
		citizenship for immigrants nicknamed "Dreamers," who are living 
		illegally in the United States after entering as children, as well as 
		for a large number of immigrant farmworkers.
 
 The two measures now go to the deeply divided Senate where they face a 
		difficult climb.
 
 By a vote of 228-197, the Democratic-controlled House passed the 
		Dreamers bill with only nine Republicans supporting it. The legislation 
		would allow Dreamers to live, work, serve in the military and continue 
		their educations without the threat of deportation and to eventually win 
		U.S. citizenship if they meet a set of requirements
 
 The House then approved the farmworker bill, 247-174, to shield about 1 
		million immigrant laborers, many of whom have been in the United States 
		for decades, from deportation.
 
		
		 
		
 Both measures are among several attempts by Democrats to reverse former 
		President Donald Trump's hard-line immigration policies.
 
 The legislation coincides with Democratic President Joe Biden's efforts 
		to contain the number of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border, 
		many of whom are fleeing dangerous conditions in Central America.
 
 Many Republicans attacked the Dreamer legislation, saying the southwest 
		border needed to be secured before taking any new steps on immigration 
		reforms.
 
 Dreamers, numbering around 1.8 million young immigrants, made the 
		dangerous journey on their own, with parents or hired hands, often to 
		escape gang violence in Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador and other 
		countries.
 
 Many have spent most of their lives in the United States and have been 
		educated in U.S. schools.
 
 During Thursday's debate over the Dreamer bill, Democratic 
		Representative Pramila Jayapal noted she came from India to the United 
		States alone at the age of 16, saying, "Let's stop the hypocrisy of 
		criminalizing immigrants."
 
 But Republican Representative Chip Roy said Democrats were doing 
		"nothing to address cartels who have ownership of our border right now" 
		and are pushing legislation that would prove to be "a magnet for traffic 
		of more children."
 
 The White House backed both bills. But it also urged lawmakers to adopt 
		broader reforms in Biden's sweeping immigration bill introduced last 
		month, saying this would secure the border and "address the root causes 
		of instability and unsafe conditions causing migration from Central 
		America."
 
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			The U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday voted to give young 
			immigrants nicknamed "Dreamers," who came to the United States 
			illegally as children, protections against deportation and a pathway 
			to citizenship. Gavino Garay reports. 
            
			 
            Biden's wide-ranging plan would provide a path to U.S. citizenship 
			to the 11 million immigrants in the country illegally. The Senate's 
			No. 2 Democrat, Dick Durbin, said this week that goal does not have 
			enough support in the House or Senate.
 "We can't keep waiting," Biden wrote on Twitter. "I urge Congress to 
			come together to find long term solutions to our entire immigration 
			system so we can create a safe, orderly, and humane immigration 
			system, tackle the root causes of migration and legalize the 
			undocumented population in the United States."
 
 The bills passed Thursday got a boost from the U.S. Chamber of 
			Commerce, the nation's largest business lobbying group, which cited 
			worries over immigrant workers' "uncertain future."
 
 It also noted that American workers employed at businesses 
			established by Dreamers would gain job security from the legislation 
			and that visa improvements for agriculture workers would help U.S. 
			operations with year-round labor needs, such as dairy farms.
 
 The Dreamers bill also would help a separate group of immigrants, 
			who came from countries that were devastated by civil wars and 
			natural disasters, and had qualified for temporary protections in 
			the United States.
 
 As president, Trump rolled back the Temporary Protected Status 
			program. In 2017 he also rescinded former President Barack Obama's 
			Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program aimed at 
			shielding qualifying Dreamers from deportation.
 
 
            
			 
			Court rulings and the Biden administration have kept DACA alive, at 
			least for now.
 
 Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell panned the House efforts on 
			Thursday, saying they would exacerbate problems at the border, 
			further dimming prospects in that chamber, where a supermajority of 
			at least 60 of 100 members are needed for most legislation to 
			advance.
 
 (Reporting by Richard Cowan and Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott 
			Malone, Cynthia Osterman, Dan Grebler, Jonathan Oatis and Aurora 
			Ellis)
 
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