Opinion | Congress could act on immigration and dreamers this year

Opinion | Congress could act on immigration and dreamers this year
(Washington Post staff illustration; iStock)
(Washington Post staff illustration; iStock)

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Donald Graham is chairman of Graham Holdings and a co-founder of TheDream.US.

Whether you are a Republican or a Democrat, your important immigration goals are in danger. Can the parties do the impossible in this lame-duck session of Congress by passing a bill that achieves both their priorities on this most inflammatory of issues?

The peril to both sides stems from a careless promise made by Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), the likely incoming speaker of the House. He pledged that on his watch, no “amnesty” bill would come to the floor.

For the “dreamers” who have waited decades for congressional action to give them a chance at citizenship, and the Democrats who support them, McCarthy’s pledge means continuing to wait until at least 2025. This would be terrible for the dreamers — and bad for the rest of us, too.

Just as sincerely, Republicans want to address security along the southern border. For those who want to do something about it — as opposed to merely talking about it — McCarthy’s promise also means a two-year wait. Joe Biden, who will be president until 2025, will not sign an all-enforcement border bill. (If incoming Republicans think they can force such a bill on him by parliamentary means, they should ask McCarthy how successful he was at repealing Obamacare.)

I am an independent who thinks both the Republicans and the Democrats are basically right. This country needs to better secure its southern border and enforce its immigration laws. The current situation on the border helps no one except “coyotes” whose profit helps to drive it. We should also welcome to the American family immigrants who have lived here for decades and led productive lives, particularly those who arrived as young children.

Nine years ago, I helped start a scholarship fund for dreamers, undocumented immigrants who came to this country as children. Among the 8,750 who have won our scholarships, the average student came here as a 4-year-old. Most of them (the DACA recipients) had proved to the Department of Homeland Security that they had no serious criminal convictions. But unlike their high school classmates, when it came time for college, they could receive no federal grants or loans for tuition. With little money of their own, most of them had been in effect barred from college.

All of us who started TheDream.us believed the opportunity to attend college should be good for these students — and great, as well, for the rest of us. The dreamers could get a good education and pour into careers where we desperately need them. And their burning motivation would make them excellent nurses and teachers, doctors and lawyers, and businesspeople.

As rather old-fashioned Americans, we also thought these young people were being treated cruelly. If you are brought to the United States by your parents as a baby, there is nothing you can do to become a citizen. Nothing. Two dreamers have won Rhodes scholarships and they remain undocumented. More than 200 are doctors or medical students, but not citizens.

In poll after poll, 70 to 75 percent of American voters favor giving such immigrants the chance to stay here, study and work — and ultimately become citizens.

Our country needs the dreamers. We desperately need nurses; since 2005, more than 180 rural hospitals have closed. Among our scholars, the No. 1 major is nursing and health care. Education majors make up another large group, and the United States also desperately needs teachers.

Another important employer in need of help is the Army, which has missed its recruiting goals this past fiscal year by 25 percent — even after offering citizens $50,000 to enlist. Why not allow young immigrants, educated since first grade in American schools, to enlist as a path to citizenship (after all the background checks anyone wants). The military would fill its ranks with willing and able young people who love this country.

Those who pay attention to the plight of the dreamers know that, in 2012, President Barack Obama created the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to give them a small head start. Those who came to the United States as young children, had no criminal convictions and met certain other criteria got two years freedom from deportation, as well as a work permit and a Social Security number, which had to be renewed every two years. They paid $495 to apply for or renew DACA, but then they could work. They still received no federal college aid or loans or other such benefits.

It’s hard to quickly name an equally successful federal program that cost so little. More than 800,000 DACA recipients went to work and began to pay what would, over a lifetime, amount to billions of dollars in taxes.

Yet DACA is in legal jeopardy. As recipients were enjoying their minimal benefits, Texas’s Republican attorney general, Ken Paxton, spent his taxpayers’ money on a lawsuit aiming to end the program — even though Texas voters favor it 2 to 1, according to two University of Texas polls. Judge Andrew Hanen, a federal judge known for his anti-immigration sentiment, responded with a finding that DACA had been unlawfully adopted.

The ultraconservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit has endorsed Hanen’s reasoning, and the lawsuit will be referred to the Supreme Court. In 2020, the justices unexpectedly saved DACA from an unrelated legal attack, but the court is different since the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the appointment of Amy Coney Barrett.

Hanen ruled that existing DACA recipients could keep their status and renew it “until a further order of this court” or others. But by his order, no new applications can be approved. President Donald Trump had already banned new DACA approvals in September 2017. When Biden reopened the program in January 2021, much of the federal government was still shut down by covid. Of about 80,000 young people who applied for DACA status, only about 5,000 were approved. Judge Hanen’s order seven months later stopped the program in its tracks.

This means that the vast majority of DACA-eligible students who turned 15 in 2017 or later cannot get a work permit. They can’t get a job at Starbucks or Google or anywhere else. Any employer in the United States that tries to hire them is committing a federal crime.

The Migration Policy Institute estimates that 98,000 undocumented students graduate from U.S. high schools every year. No matter how able they are or how well-educated, most will be forced to do the work their undocumented parents do: clean houses or work off the books in restaurants or on construction jobs.

Unless Congress changes the law, over the next 10 years, about 1 million new high school graduates will never be able to work. The nurses and teachers in our scholarship program won’t staff hospitals or classrooms.

Given that Congress has not passed an immigration bill since 1986, is it possible that lawmakers might approve one during this year’s lame-duck session? It is, and here’s why:

First look at the issue from the Republicans’ point of view. They believe that the first thing they must address in immigration law is the situation at the southern border, where last year more than 2,700,000 undocumented immigrants crossed the border. Regarding dreamers, many Republican senators and representatives say, we’d like to help them but we won’t until the border situation is fixed.

Doing something about the situation on the border is a good idea. But McCarthy’s pledge binds Republicans as tightly as it does the Democrats. If the speaker will allow no help (he would call it “amnesty”) for immigrants already in the United States to come to the floor, how will he fix the border? Does he think Congress will pass and Biden will sign an immigration bill that’s all enforcement and no relief for immigrants? Of course not.

Republican lawmakers should bring forward their best ideas to reinforce the border and also be prepared to help DACA-eligible young people and others get work permits and a chance at a green card. Give a faster path to citizenship for those who serve in health care or education and in rural or underserved communities. Allow dreamers to serve in the U.S. military.

Democrats, for their part, should be prepared to listen to ideas that would secure the southern border. The current situation appears to have hurt the party in the 2022 elections and will remain a huge problem in 2024. Here is a chance for Democrats to strengthen their immigration policy, while giving deserving people a chance to work legally in the United States — and then become citizens.

No longer young, ‘dreamers’ uneasily watch a legal challenge

No longer young, ‘dreamers’ uneasily watch a legal challenge

When Juliana Macedo do Nascimento signed up for an Obama-period plan to protect immigrants who arrived to the region as younger little ones from deportation, she enrolled at California State College, Los Angeles, transitioning from work opportunities in housekeeping, little one treatment, automobile repair service and a building organization.

Now, a 10 years later at age 36, graduate experiments at Princeton University are at the rear of her and she functions in Washington as deputy director of advocacy for United We Desire, a countrywide group.

“Dreamers” like Macedo do Nascimento, prolonged a image of immigrant youth, are increasingly easing into center age as eligibility necessities have been frozen considering the fact that 2012, when the Deferred Motion for Childhood Arrivals system was launched.

The oldest recipients were in their early 30s when DACA started and are in their early 40s right now. At the identical time, fewer people today turning 16 can satisfy a necessity to have been in the United States continually due to the fact June 2007.

The average age of a DACA receiver was 28.2 yrs in March, up from 23.8 in September 2017, according to the Migration Policy Institute. About 40{c024931d10daf6b71b41321fa9ba9cd89123fb34a4039ac9f079a256e3c1e6e8} are 30 or older, according to fwd.us, a group that supports DACA.

As much less are qualified and new enrollments have been closed considering that July 2021 less than court docket order, the range of DACA recipients fell to just earlier mentioned 600,000 at the finish of March, in accordance to government figures.

Beneficiaries have come to be property owners and married. Many have U.S. citizen kids.

“DACA is not for younger folks,” Macedo do Nascimento mentioned. “They’re not even qualified for it any more. We are nicely into center age.”

Born out of President Barack Obama’s irritation with Congress’ failure to reach an settlement on immigration reform, DACA was meant to be a short term option and quite a few observed it as imperfect from the commence. Immigration advocates were being upset the policy did not consist of a pathway to citizenship and warned the program’s want to be renewed every single two yrs would leave numerous experience in limbo. Opponents, which include a lot of Republicans, noticed the plan a legal overreach on Obama’s aspect and criticized it as worthwhile individuals who hadn’t adopted immigration legislation.

In a move intended to insulate DACA from legal obstacle, the Biden administration produced a 453-webpage rule on Aug. 24 that sticks carefully to DACA as it was introduced in 2012. It codified DACA as a regulation by subjecting it to probable alterations soon after considerable public remark.

DACA advocates welcomed the regulation but have been unhappy that age eligibility was unchanged.

The rule was “a skipped possibility,” stated Karen Tumlin, an legal professional and director of Justice Motion Center. DACA, she explained, was “locked in time, like a fossil preserved in amber.”

The administration weighed growing age eligibility but determined versus it, mentioned Ur Jaddou, director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Solutions, which administers the software.

“The president informed us, ‘How do we protect and fortify DACA? How do we make sure the stability of the method and how best to do that?’ and this was the willpower that was built soon after a whole lot of considered and thorough consideration,” Jaddou reported Monday in Los Angeles.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court docket of Appeals, which is taking into consideration a obstacle to DACA from Texas and 8 other states, questioned both equally sides to demonstrate how the new rule influences the program’s authorized standing.

Texas, in a court submitting Thursday, said the rule can’t conserve DACA. The states conceded that it really is equivalent to the 2012 memo that created the method but that they “share quite a few of the exact flaws.”

The executive branch has “neither the authority to make a decision the significant questions that DACA addresses, nor the electrical power to confer substantive immigration added benefits,” the states wrote.

The Justice Section argued the new rule — “substantively similar” to the unique software — renders moot the argument that the administration unsuccessful to abide by federal rule-producing treatments.

DACA has been closed to new enrollees considering the fact that July 2021 though the scenario winds its way through the New Orleans-centered appeals court docket but two-calendar year renewals are permitted.

Uncertainty bordering DACA has brought on nervousness and aggravation among ageing recipients.

Pamela Chomba, 32, arrived with her family from Peru at age 11 and settled in New Jersey. She worries about dropping her task and missing mortgage loan payments if DACA is dominated illegal. She place off starting to be a mom simply because she will not know if she can stay in the U.S. and doesn’t want to be a “burden” on her little ones.

“We’re individuals with life and designs, and we really just want to make confident that we can sense safe and sound,” reported Chomba, director of point out immigration campaigns for fwd.us.

Macedo do Nascimento was 14 when she arrived with her family from Brazil in 2001. She has not noticed a brother who returned to Brazil just right before DACA was announced in 10 many years. Worldwide travel under DACA is extremely restricted.

Like Biden and numerous DACA advocates, she believes laws is the remedy.

“Congress is the final resolution below,” she claimed. “(Both of those functions) keep passing the ball amongst each individual other.

The uncertainty has afflicted her, the eldest of 3 siblings.

“The panic of currently being deported has occur back again,” Macedo do Nascimento reported, mainly because “you by no means know when this plan is heading to end.”

No longer young, ‘dreamers’ uneasily watch a legal challenge

No longer young, ‘dreamers’ uneasily watch a legal challenge

LOS ANGELES (AP) — When Juliana Macedo do Nascimento signed up for an Obama-period software to defend immigrants who arrived to the country as youthful youngsters from deportation, she enrolled at California State College, Los Angeles, transitioning from positions in housekeeping, kid care, auto maintenance and a building enterprise.

Now, a decade later on at age 36, graduate scientific studies at Princeton University are behind her and she works in Washington as deputy director of advocacy for United We Desire, a countrywide team.

“Dreamers” like Macedo do Nascimento, extended a image of immigrant youth, are increasingly easing into center age as eligibility needs have been frozen considering the fact that 2012, when the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals method was released.

The oldest recipients were in their early 30s when DACA commenced and are in their early 40s currently. At the similar time, fewer individuals turning 16 can meet up with a need to have been in the United States consistently due to the fact June 2007.

The typical age of a DACA receiver was 28.2 several years in March, up from 23.8 in September 2017, in accordance to the Migration Policy Institute. About 40{c024931d10daf6b71b41321fa9ba9cd89123fb34a4039ac9f079a256e3c1e6e8} are 30 or more mature, according to fwd.us, a team that supports DACA.

As much less are eligible and new enrollments have been shut due to the fact July 2021 underneath courtroom purchase, the selection of DACA recipients fell to just previously mentioned 600,000 at the close of March, in accordance to governing administration figures.

Beneficiaries have turn out to be householders and married. Several have U.S. citizen youngsters.

“DACA is not for young individuals,” Macedo do Nascimento said. “They’re not even eligible for it anymore. We are well into middle age.”

Born out of President Barack Obama’s disappointment with Congress’ failure to arrive at an arrangement on immigration reform, DACA was meant to be a temporary option and several observed it as imperfect from the start. Immigration advocates had been let down the policy didn’t incorporate a pathway to citizenship and warned the program’s need to be renewed every two yrs would go away numerous experience in limbo. Opponents, together with lots of Republicans, saw the coverage a authorized overreach on Obama’s element and criticized it as rewarding persons who hadn’t followed immigration legislation.

In a shift meant to insulate DACA from authorized challenge, the Biden administration released a 453-page rule on Aug. 24 that sticks intently to DACA as it was introduced in 2012. It codified DACA as a regulation by subjecting it to potential modifications immediately after comprehensive public comment.

DACA advocates welcomed the regulation but ended up dissatisfied that age eligibility was unchanged.

The rule was “a skipped opportunity,” explained Karen Tumlin, an attorney and director of Justice Motion Centre. DACA, she claimed, was “locked in time, like a fossil preserved in amber.”

The administration weighed growing age eligibility but determined versus it, reported Ur Jaddou, director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Products and services, which administers the application.

“The president told us, ‘How do we protect and fortify DACA? How do we guarantee the stability of the method and how very best to do that?’ and this was the resolve that was built just after a ton of believed and very careful consideration,” Jaddou said Monday in Los Angeles.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is taking into consideration a challenge to DACA from Texas and 8 other states, asked equally sides to explain how the new rule impacts the program’s authorized standing.

Texas, in a courtroom submitting Thursday, reported the rule cannot conserve DACA. The states conceded that it’s identical to the 2012 memo that produced the application but that they “share numerous of the very same problems.”

The executive department has “neither the authority to choose the big thoughts that DACA addresses, nor the electric power to confer substantive immigration gains,” the states wrote.

The Justice Department argued the new rule — “substantively identical” to the first application — renders moot the argument that the administration unsuccessful to follow federal rule-generating treatments.

DACA has been closed to new enrollees because July 2021 although the case winds its way by means of the New Orleans-based appeals court but two-calendar year renewals are permitted.

Uncertainty surrounding DACA has brought on anxiousness and annoyance among the growing older recipients.

Pamela Chomba, 32, arrived with her loved ones from Peru at age 11 and settled in New Jersey. She worries about getting rid of her position and missing mortgage payments if DACA is dominated unlawful. She put off getting to be a mother for the reason that she does not know if she can continue to be in the U.S. and does not want to be a “burden” on her little ones.

“We’re people today with life and ideas, and we actually just want to make positive that we can sense secure,” stated Chomba, director of state immigration strategies for fwd.us.

Macedo do Nascimento was 14 when she arrived with her family from Brazil in 2001. She has not observed a brother who returned to Brazil just before DACA was introduced in 10 yrs. Worldwide journey below DACA is highly restricted.

Like Biden and numerous DACA advocates, she thinks legislation is the respond to.

“Congress is the ultimate option in this article,” she said. “(Equally functions) retain passing the ball among every single other.

The uncertainty has impacted her, the eldest of a few siblings.

“The panic of currently being deported has arrive again,” Macedo do Nascimento reported, mainly because “you never know when this coverage is likely to close.”