The Trump administration has issued a list of immigration priorities that threaten to derail a deal with Democrats on protecting young immigrants known as “Dreamers.” They include building Trump’s promised border wall.
US President Donald Trump on Sunday presented congressional leaders with a list of hard-line policy wishes that he says must be enacted in exchange for a deal with Democrats to protect hundreds of thousands of young immigrants from deportation.
The list includes the construction of Trump’s long-promised — and controversial — wall along the US-Mexico border and speeding up deportation of visa overstayers. Trump also calls in the list for an end to “extended-family chain migration,” limiting family-based green cards to spouses and minor children.
The demands include some policies that Democrats say are off the table, and thus could potentially derail ongoing negotiations over protecting young immigrants from deportation, many of whom were brought to the US illegally as children. The immigrants, known as “Dreamers,” had been given a reprieve from deportation and permission to work legally in the country under President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program.
Trump ended the program last month, but gave Congress six months to come up with alternative legislation to prevent recipients from losing their status.
Read more: Donald Trump’s DACA, wall comments leave US politicians scrambling
Democrat outrage
Senior Democrats have sharply criticized Trump’s list, saying it went “far beyond what is reasonable” and contained no attempt at compromise.
“The Administration can’t be serious about compromise or helping the Dreamers if they begin with a list that is anathema to the Dreamers, to the immigrant community and to the vast majority of Americans,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a joint statement.
Media attention elsewhere
The list, which also includes proposals to dramatically increase the number of immigration enforcement officials was issued unexpectedly in the middle of a long weekend.
Its release was also overshadowed by the media attention given instead to Vice President Mike Pence’s exit from a football game on Sunday because some players knelt instead of stood during the national anthem before the game in a continuation of protests against racial injustice.
Pence’s action has been seen in some quarters as a PR stunt by the administration.
tj/kms (dpa, AP, AFP)