• DACA at 12 is on life support and already leaving out many young immigr

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jun 18 21:58:18 2024
    XPost: alt.fraud, alt.politics.socialism.democratic, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/daca-12-anniversary-program-at-risk- trump-biden-rcna157152

    Hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the U.S. will count their blessings
    on Saturday as they mark a new anniversary of a program that has let them
    stay in the country, study and work and build lives.

    Millions more who arrived here as children and don't qualify for it are
    wishing they'd been so lucky.

    The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program began 12
    years ago Saturday. While its beneficiaries hope to have had a permanent
    legal status in the U.S. by now, they also are celebrating the educations, better paying jobs, families and homes they've been able to build and the freedom from fear of arrest and deportation that came as a result of
    President Barack Obama's executive order.

    But their commemoration is sobered by the possibility that Republicans
    will succeed in their legal and political battle to end DACA. Donald
    Trump, who tried to end DACA and stopped new applications, could be re-
    elected president.

    DACA recipients also recognize that they are outnumbered by the more than
    a million young immigrants who could have qualified for DACA, but have
    been denied because of Republican-led battles to end it and a halt on new
    DACA applications.

    By 2025, no undocumented high school graduates will qualify for DACA
    because they will have entered the U.S. after the required arrival to the
    U.S. of June 15, 2007, according to FWD.US, a progressive group that
    focuses on immigration and criminal justice.

    "The young people that were undocumented in elementary school and are now
    going into middle or high school or graduating are facing an uncertain
    future like I did when I was in their shoes," said Greisa Martínez Rosas, executive director of the United We Dream Action, the political arm of an immigrant youth-led advocacy group. Martínez graduated from high school undocumented but obtained DACA in 2013.

    Those realities have created an urgency this election that has many
    immigrant advocates criticizing President Joe Biden for not doing more to protect them, yet also favoring his re-election.

    "President Biden can walk and chew gum at the same time and so can we," Martínez said. "We can be clear about the massive needs that millions of undocumented people are facing and the lack of action this president or administration has had and also be clear that we cannot have a second administration of Trump."

    Biden campaign spokesperson Fabiola Rodriguez said in a statement that "on
    Day One, President Biden sent Congress a plan to provide a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers and has done everything in his power to preserve
    and fortify the DACA program including by expanding affordable, quality
    health care access through the ACA to over 100,000 Dreamers." She added
    that Trump "is promising to end the DACA program, separate families and institute mass detention camps for immigrants."

    Trump campaign spokesperson Jaime Florez said they did not have a comment
    on the DACA anniversary or Trump's plans on DACA.

    As of now, about 530,000 people are in the U.S. under DACA. An estimated
    84,000 have applications pending that were submitted in the time when prohibition on new applications was briefly lifted. In 2023, the Migration Policy Institute estimated 1.16 million immigrants would have qualified
    for DACA under 2012 rules if the program would have been allowed to
    continue without legal attempts to stop it.

    A block on new applications, and lives in limbo
    The Biden administration began accepting new DACA applications in 2021,
    and that's when Reyna Valdivias Solorio submitted her paperwork. But her application got stuck in limbo when a Texas court ruled DACA illegal and blocked processing all new applications again. The Biden administration
    still accepts new applications but doesn't process them.

    A recent graduate of Nevada State University, Valdivias holds a degree in business administration, concentrating on financial services. She hoped to
    be a financial analyst. Instead, she works with her father in construction
    and landscaping.

    "I am 110-pound girl lifting wheelbarrows far heavier than my own weight, digging knee-deep trenches and living in extreme exhaustion in the heat of
    Las Vegas," Valdivias said in a rally at the U.S. Capitol Thursday. But
    this is not the hard part, she said.

    "The hardest part is the emotional stress that comes from living in fear
    that one day, my older siblings, my parents and I could be deported and be separated from my younger siblings in this country we call home," she
    said. Her younger siblings were born in the U.S. and are not at risk of deportation.

    Alexis Toro Juarez, a biology student at Marymount University in Virginia
    who hopes to attend dental school, had planned to apply for DACA. He had
    his application in, his fingerprints done and was only awaiting a Social Security document when the courts shut off applications again.

    "I was worried whether I could finish my education after high school,"
    Toro Juarez said. A scholarship through Dream.US, which provides
    scholarships to undocumented students, paid his college tuition.

    Eighteen-year-old Sergio Cipriano just graduated from high school in
    Phoenix and is headed to St. Mary's University in San Antonio to start his dream of being a pediatrician. A spiritual person, he wanted to attend a religious school and was also able to afford college through a Dream.US scholarship.

    He was brought to the U.S. when he was 1 year old. He applied for DACA
    when he was a high school freshman, just meeting the eligibility
    requirements. A few weeks after getting a notification that his
    application had been received, a decision by a Texas judge shut down new applications, he said.

    "It's terrifying," he said about living without legal status and the possibility of deportation. "I could lose my life I have here — I carry
    that and it's a lot, but I try not to be afraid."

    Abraham Enriquez, who heads the conservative-leaning Bienvenido US, agreed
    with his liberal counterparts that some immigrants who arrived as children deserve a path to citizenship through congressional action. But like other Republicans, he said DACA should never have existed and it should be
    dissolved. He emphasized that he was speaking for himself and not his
    group, which focuses on Hispanic engagement.

    The White House plans an event next week to mark the DACA anniversary. The administration is working on providing DACA recipients without health
    coverage access to Affordable Care Act plans.

    No legal status, but part of the community
    Many of the young people who were shut out of DACA are following their predecessors who fought for the program by engaging in activism or civic
    and community life.

    Valdivias, Toro Juarez and Cipriano were part of the contingent that
    visited lawmakers' offices in D.C. and rallied at the Capitol last week.
    They also are involved in activist groups that are working to turn out
    voters this election.

    Karime Rodriguez, a former DACA holder who now has legal residency, said
    there is disillusionment in the community that once again a president has
    not been able to make immigration reform happen.

    "We know the candidates are not ideal now," said Rodriguez, immigration services manager with LUCHA immigrant advocacy group.

    "We are not voting for our saviors," she said. "You have to vote for the candidate that is going to allow us to make change in the future — Trump
    is not that candidate."


    --
    We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
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    Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.

    No collusion - Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller III, March 2019.
    Officially made Nancy Pelosi a two-time impeachment loser.

    Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
    fiasco, President Trump.

    Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
    The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
    queer liberal democrat donors.

    President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.

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