President Trump would like to end Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. This was one of his primary campaign promises, but he is facing opposition from both Democrats and among the GOP.
President Donald Trump is leaning toward ending a U.S. immigration policy the Obama administration started for undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children, according to multiple sources.The president’s decision on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, could be announced as early as next week, one source said.Trump has to make a decision before Sept. 5 when the 10-plus state attorneys general, led by Texas A.G. Ken Paxton, said they’d sue the Trump administration to end it and force the administration’s hand. Trump has to decide whether to defend the program or not, thereby ending it.Though an announcement is likely next week, a senior administration official urged caution, noting that the president’s thinking could always change.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions is adamantly opposed to keeping Obama’s DACA Executive Order, but as the Trump administration sheds people who were driving the winning Trump message, proponents of DACA have reason to hope it will remain in place.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions has urged Trump to immediately end the program, while the Department of Homeland Security prefers a more complex approach to the problem. Trump himself is reported to be hesitant to deport children who were brought here when they were very young and has continued to issue new permits under the program.If DACA was ended, it would impact at least 750,000 people.If Trump did choose to end DACA, he would not have the support of his entire party. A group of predominantly centrist Republicans in Congress sent Trump an open letter earlier this week denouncing any attempts to end the program.
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