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Regardless of what the Supreme Court decides, DACA isn't worth saving

Ruben Navarrette Jr. on

SAN DIEGO -- Even as a Mexican American who has spent three decades defending immigrants, I'm done with DACA.

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals is back in the news, but the Obama-era program is perhaps not long for this world. Last week, the Supreme Court heard arguments about whether President Trump had the power to end it in September 2017. A ruling from the high court is not expected for several months, but the conservative majority seems likely to side with Trump.

Soon, it could be adios DACA. I'm good with that.

If Republicans want to strike down this program, they can knock themselves out. In fact, with any luck, some in the GOP will get knocked out, too. The demise of DACA could inflame Latino voters to the point where they turn out heavily in next year's election -- and leave the voting booth with a pound of elephant flesh. The backlash could force Republicans in Congress whose districts have substantial Latino populations into early retirement. Given how insufferably Republicans behave when the immigration issue comes along, this would be a public service. Good riddance.

That goes double for DACA. The program is a headache, a distraction and a farce. It is also a poor man's substitute for what this country really needs and the undocumented actually deserve: comprehensive immigration reform.

Also, to the degree that the program was the executive branch's answer to the Dream Act -- an elitist bill that offered legal status to young people but only sent lifeboats to those who went to college or joined the military -- DACA is just as exclusionary. The program's requirements include that applicants "are currently in school, have graduated from high school, have obtained a GED, or have been honorably discharged from the Coast Guard or armed forces."

 

There is nothing for the parents of these young people, who may not have much of an education but represent the backbone, heart and soul of immigrant families.

Born of original spin, the program was never intended to be more than a pacifier tossed to Dreamers by one of the most anti-immigrant and pro-removal administrations in U.S. history -- at least until Team Trump came along.

In the summer of 2012, President Obama was staring at poll numbers that didn't show much love from Latino voters. After Obama broke his 2008 election promise to make immigration reform a priority and instead deported record numbers of people, many Latinos were not sure they wanted to reelect him. Also, there were rumors that Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, a Republican, was discussing the idea of a GOP-sponsored stab at legalizing young people brought to the United States as children.

To cut Rubio off at the pass, Obama announced an executive action to halt deportations for a specific group of people -- the very thing he had spent the previous couple of years telling liberal supporters he didn't have the power to do because he wasn't "a king."

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