The DREAM Act Is Being Revived in the Senate, but Trump Is Already Shooting It Down
On Thursday, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham and Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin are set to introduce legislation to protect undocumented immigrants who came to the United States as children, reviving hopes that the Senate might finally pass a version of the immigration reform DREAM Act, more than 15 years after it was first proposed in 2001 by Durbin and Utah Republican Orrin Hatch.
But before the pair could even unveil the bill on the Senate floor, White House officials had already sworn not to support it, despite its bipartisan origins as well as the administration’s repeated insistence that people currently covered by President Obama’s DACA program—which was created in response to the Senate’s failure to pass previous versions of the DREAM Act—would not be targeted under Donald Trump’s ongoing anti-immigrant actions.
“It’s enforcement first,” one White House official told McClatchy. “Then we can get to all these other things.”