The Obama administration’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program changed Fernando Najera’s world. For starters, he’s no longer afraid of being deported to a country he left when he was 3 years old.
“That in itself is a real big blessing for a community of people who have had to live in the shadows because of that fear,” he said. “It’s renewed my faith in God.”
Although Najera was in the top 10 percent of his high school class, he didn’t know if college was a possibility until DACA came through. Because of DACA, he could get a job and a scholarship, and he’s now a junior at the University of Arizona, double-majoring in law and political science.
“To me, it’s not so much the freedom that every other American has, but it’s also served as a message that everything is going to fall into place,” he said. “You’ve got to fight a little bit, be patient, but God has everything in control.”
But now Najera faces the unknown after Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that Trump administration would be rescinding the DACA program, leaving him and roughly 800,000 other participants in the program wondering what’s next.
“We are people of compassion and we are people of law, but there is nothing compassionate about the failure to enforce immigration law,” Sessions said Tuesday morning at the press conference announcing the decision, which Trump had teased for two weeks.
Sessions said that the program would remain in place for another six months, allowing Congress time to come up with an alternative to the DACA program.
Created by the Obama administration in 2012, the executive action applies to undocumented children of immigrants who were brought into the country at a young age, have lived in the U.S. for at least five years and don’t have a criminal record. DACA allows them to live their lives without fear of deportation, to work legally, obtain a driver’s license and pay in-state tuition to college.
Congressman Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ03) said that an extension to DACA is one of many critical issues the executive branch has been leveraging in exchange for border-wall funding—a ransom that opponents are not willing to pay.
“We need to codify Obama’s executive order into law now and move on,” Grijalva said during a roundtable discussion on Aug. 31, adding that the “faces and humanity of these young people” have garnered massive support.
According to a recent NBC News/SurveyMonkey poll, nearly two-thirds of Americans support DACA.
Congresswoman Martha McSally (R-AZ02) joined with nine other Republican lawmakers to sign a Sept. 1 letter to House Speaker Paul Ryan, asking that Congress create legislation to keep DREAMers in the country and allow them to continue being unhindered members of society.
The letter noted that while the legislators don’t agree with how Obama created the program,
“DACA recipients have contributed to both the U.S. economy and our society.”
“Since being approved for DACA status, an overwhelming majority of these individuals have enrolled in school or found employment,” the letter reads. “Most have also increased their average earnings and many have served in the military, opened businesses or purchased homes.”
With all the contributions DREAMers are making and will undoubtedly continue to make, the Cato Institute estimates that eliminating DACA and deporting all Dreamers would cost the U.S. economy $283 billion over 10 years.
The Republican lawmakers’ letter also points out that DACA recipients willingly gave the federal government their personal information, adding “it would be wrong to back on our word and subject these individuals for deportation.”
The letter ended by saying that Congress has a responsibility “to address this problem legislatively,” and they are “willing and ready to find a solution no matter what action is taken by President Trump in the coming days.”
In the past, McSally voted for policies that would hurt DACA, including a January 2015 bill to block its continuation. And in March 2016, she voted to challenge the legality of the executive action that created DACA.
More recently McSally has supported the DACA population, becoming a cosponsor in April for Recognizing America’s Children Act, or RAC, legislation backed by 18 Republicans that would allow DREAMers a pathways to legal status.
Introduced by Florida Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo, in March, RAC would allow a 5-year conditional status to DREAMers. Provided that DREAMers don’t break any laws, don’t use public assistance, pay back taxes with interest and are continually either employed, in school, in the military or receive an honorable discharge, they would qualify for a 5-year permanent residency at the end of the conditional-status period.
“We may have to walk the plank together and have a compromised solution,” McSally told the Tucson Weekly. “Different elements on both sides want different things, but there’s a way for us to find some common ground to address these issues because these kids need some certainty, and we’ve got to solve this legislatively.”
DREAMers, immigration lawyers, activists and allies rallied last week in front of Tucson City Hall.
“We continue to hear these threats against DACA,” Jessica Rodriguez, a member of the human-rights group Living United for Change in Arizona, told the crowd. “This is not going to stop. We’re going to continue to take the streets. We’re going to continue to call on our officials. We are not going to stop.”
Immigration attorney Mo Goldman told attendees to focus their energy toward local elected officials.
“Call out representatives like Rep. McSally, who has said that she supports the DACAmented community and the DREAMers,” he said. “She’s been out there. She said it, and she needs to be held accountable. She needs to be on the phone talking to the White House.”
Najera says the ending DACA could be catastrophic. He’s less worried about himself and more concerned that about the impact on the other 800,000 people who would have their lives upended. But he added that the impact goes beyond immigrants protected by DACA.
“It’s about all of us,” he said. “There’s 11 million of us who need help, who are living in shadows, who are living without access to human necessities like healthcare, like working rights, all of these things that should be a given to anybody in a country like ours.”
This article appears in Aug 31 – Sep 6, 2017.

He has supported racists and bigots, destabilized our Military by his ban on Transgenders, and now he is calling for the possible removal of individuals brought to this country as Children…they know No other Country…the US is their Country!!!…Children paying the price for the “sins” of their Parents.
Donald Trump will continue his Divisive Influences as a Threat to the very fabric of our Democracy and National Security unless he is REMOVED from Office Forthwith!!!
FU POTUS U POS.
DACA is unconstitutional for the same reasons DAPA was.
So, the onus is on Congress to pass a legislative fix, and in my view, that fix should combine amnesty for “dreamers” with real immigration reform: RAISE Act, Mandatory E-Verify, exit visa tracking and border security. Everyone gets something under that compromise.
i dont agree with ending the program, but if in half a year from now we dont have something reinstated to protect these people, we came blame congress, not the president
The key is what you finally said in the article; congress needs to provide a permanent solution. The memo President Obama did now termed DACA wasn’t sustainable. Encourage congress to do their job.
Why do people keep expecting anything else to come from the current president?
I understand that some thought if his inner circle of advisers were stripped away that there might be a chance of restoring some semblance of order to the office, but that did not happen. He continues to play to his political base — and baser instincts — regardless of the consequences.
If anything, it is more apparent than ever that this man has an agenda to systematically dismantle the accomplishments of the previous administration for better or worse.
The answer to the real question that will reveal the true nature of this president — is he undoing everything the previous president did because it is right for the country, or is he undoing it because a black man touched it.
This article is a LIE. Trump did not “rescind” DACA. He gave Congress 6 months to fix it as they should have done long ago. The D in DACA stands for deferred which is what Obama named it when he made this illegal decree. Back then I recall it was 50000 and now it’s 500000 or 800000. Only a tiny fraction (1%) are college grads or in the military. A far greater number are on welfare or involve in illegal activities. The real reason Dems want this is for VOTES.
And your source for those “facts'”, Mr. Stagg? Could it be Breitbart, or, say, Infowars?
What’s missing in all this is very simple: compassion. There isn’t a shred of human kindness or decency in this administration, from bottom to top. None. It is the most complete transformation for the worst I can imagine, by a minority-elected president.
I’m sorry, but race baiters are at it again. Trump did not end DACA, he put it in the hands of congress, where it should have been in the first place and not done illegally by obamanation. Illegal is not a race, so there is no racism here just race baiters.
Trump has pledged to reverse every decision made by President Obama. The reason is that President Obama embarrassed Trump at the White House Correspondence Dinner in 2011. From that point Trump decided he was going to get even. He can’t let the Affordable Care Act alone because it was the signature program established by President Obama. The Republicans are working with Trump because they made the announcement that President Obama would not get anything done while he was president if he had to depend on them.
This sub-population of illegal immigrants should be granted amnesty, but only in exchange for meaningful reductions in overall immigration rates.
PaulAzz:
You’re sorry all right.