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Eakinomics: DACA
Returns
A federal judge ruled Friday that the Trump
Administration must fully restore the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals
(DACA) program it inherited from the Obama Administration, thus ending a
roller coaster ride for the program. DACA was created in 2012 for those who
had arrived before age 16, lived in the country since 2007, and have a
high-school diploma or a GED. DACA participants, often known as Dreamers,
could get work permits and were protected against deportation.
Then-president Obama stretched the limits of executive enforcement discretion
to create DACA and President Trump sought to end it. A legal fight ensued,
with the Supreme Court ultimately ruling that the Trump Administration
rule-making process was flawed and overturned it. Friday’s ruling means that
the issue is settled and new applicants can again apply for Dreamer status.
But that should not be the end of the issue. DACA was never a good idea, and
a questionable use of executive authority. There is widespread, bipartisan
sympathy for the plight of the Dreamers; the best next step would be
legislation ending the issue forever. And while Congress is at it, it could
take on other legalization issues as desired and undertake a fundamental
overhaul of the core visa-granting system. One example of such a system was
proposed by Jacqueline Varas and me. It reorients legal immigration to
emphasize the potential economic contribution of immigrants, thus providing a
much-needed boost to the long-run growth potential of the U.S. economy.
There is widespread interest in bipartisan policymaking in the next Congress.
Immigration reform can be one of those issues.
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