'Dreamers' left out in the cold by US Senate border bill
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[February 06, 2024]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bipartisan border security bill headed to a
U.S. Senate vote this week is likely to dash hopes for a quick, clear
path to citizenship for hundreds of thousands of people brought into the
U.S. illegally as children, as Congress takes a harder line on
immigration.
This group, known as "Dreamers," had been a top priority for Democrats
in immigration policy talks for more than a decade.
But as Republicans made new border restrictions a condition of aid for
U.S. allies Ukraine and Israel sought by Democratic President Joe Biden,
the Dreamers question was left off the table.
Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, said that at the onset of the
just-concluded talks Republicans rejected his plea to include the
Dreamers.
"There are members on the other side that have the position of not one
single immigrant under any circumstances," Durbin said in an interview.
Some Republican lawmakers said it was unlikely Congress would take up
the question of the Dreamers at any time in the foreseeable future.
Democratic Senator Chris Murphy, one of three senators who negotiated
the bill, acknowledged the lack of progress in helping Dreamers.
"We still have work to do, like providing a pathway to citizenship for
Dreamers and other undocumented people, but this bill is an important
downpayment on immigration reform," he said on Sunday.
There are no guarantees that the bipartisan bill will become law. It
faces some opposition from both left and right in Congress and may not
even be taken up by the Republican-controlled House of Representatives,
after former President Donald Trump repeatedly criticized the idea.
Currently, there are 544,690 Dreamers receiving temporary protection
from deportation under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals
program created in 2012 by then-President Barack Obama, a Democrat.
While they also are granted work permits under DACA, their status in the
United States has to be renewed every two years and the new Senate bill
keeps them in limbo.
But there are thought to be as many as 2 million Dreamers in the United
States when counting those who currently are not covered by DACA. New
sign-ups under the program have been placed on hold by court challenges
to the program.
"To say that it's disappointing and frustrating I think is an
understatement," said Diana Pliego, whose parents brought her to the
U.S. at the age of three in 1997. "I've been waiting 26 years for
Congress to pass a meaningful pathway."
Now 29, Pliego recounted a lifetime of deportation fears and childhood
poverty because of her family's illegal immigration status.
She qualified for protection from deportation under the 2012 Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program, went on to earn a
college degree and now lives in a Washington suburb and works for the
National Immigration Law Center. But her childhood fears of deportation
linger.
"I'm always aware of a police presence," Pliego said. "Even to this day
when I am driving, I see (police) lights, I kind of panic a little bit."
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DACA recipient Diana Pliego, poses for a photograph as a bipartisan
border security bill is likely to dash hopes for a quick, clear path
to citizenship for hundreds of thousands of people, known as
“Dreamers”, brought in to the U.S. illegally as children, in
Gaithersburg, Maryland, U.S., February 5, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn
Hockstein
'OFF THE TABLE'
Republican Senator Thom Tillis, who was part of past immigration
reform attempts, said he is sympathetic to the Dreamers plight. But
the notion of helping them or other undocumented immigrants who have
long lived in the U.S. has become "toxic" because of the mass
migration at the southern border, he added.
"I think that's off the table for years now," Tillis said in an
interview.
U.S. law enforcement has arrested around 2 million immigrants in
fiscal year 2023 amid a wave of global migration due to wars,
natural disasters and persecution.
Immigration ranks as the second-greatest worry for Americans,
according a Reuters/Ipsos poll published last week. Some 17% of
respondents said it was their top concern, a sharp increase from
December.
Many Republicans argue that any program granting new rights to
people who immigrate illegally, including children who had no say in
their arrivals, would simply encourage more chaos at the border.
Meanwhile, the legality of the DACA's implementation is being
challenged and the U.S. Supreme Court could ultimately decide its
fate.
"Of all the undocumented, these are the most sympathetic and the
most likely to be helped," Durbin said.
Marielena Hincapie, distinguished immigration scholar at Cornell
University Law School, held out hope for future action by Congress
on behalf of Dreamers, especially if DACA appeared to be at risk.
Such a "crisis," she said, could create "a legislative window" for
Dreamer legislation.
"For many years, there was always this quid pro quo: If you talk
about increased enforcement and detention, you also have to talk
about legalization" for certain groups of immigrants, she said.
Edwin Torres DeSantiago, a 30-year-old DACA recipient in
Minneapolis, said it is infuriating but not surprising to see
senators negotiate a border deal without Dreamers.
"We're not talking about 10,000 people," he said, speaking of the
DACA population. "We're talking about hundreds of thousands of
people who are teachers, who are nurses, who are doctors, who are
professionals."
Torres came to the U.S. from El Salvador on a tourist visa at age
eight to join his parents, who also lack permanent status. Today, he
is vice president of a public relations firm.
He worries that the Supreme Court could undo DACA or that Trump, if
re-elected, could further clamp down on immigrants. His family's
"Armageddon" plan is to move to California because of its strong
immigrant protections.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; additional reporting by Ted Hesson;
Editing by Scott Malone and Daniel Wallis)
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