Home Government BREAKING: It’s OFFICIAL! Trump Will End One of Obama’s Most Unconstitutional Acts

BREAKING: It’s OFFICIAL! Trump Will End One of Obama’s Most Unconstitutional Acts

Politico reports that President Trump has decided to end the Obama Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)

According to the USCIS:

On June 15, 2012, the Secretary of Homeland Security announced that certain people who came to the United States as children and meet several guidelines may request consideration of deferred action for a period of two years, subject to renewal. They are also eligible for work authorization. Deferred action is a use of prosecutorial discretion to defer removal action against an individual for a certain period of time. Deferred action does not provide lawful status.

The DACA is only a 2 year deferal and does not grant citizenship or permanent residency for anyone. The program is unconstitutional and only delays the inevitable.

Obama’s unconstitutional Dreamer act will be finally finished. He should have never put it in place to begin with.

Get ready for a full scale assault on the President with all sorts of baloney about the DACA from the liberal media, Democrats, and all the fake traitor Republicans like Paul Ryan, Lindsay Graham, and John Mccain.

Politico reports:

President Donald Trump has decided to end the Obama-era program that grants work permits to undocumented immigrants who arrived in the country as children, according to two sources familiar with his thinking. Senior White House aides huddled Sunday afternoon to discuss the rollout of a decision likely to ignite a political firestorm — and fulfill one of the president’s core campaign promises.

Trump has wrestled for months with whether to do away with the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, known as DACA. He has faced strong warnings from members of his own party not to scrap the program and struggled with his own misgivings about targeting minors for deportation.

Conversations with Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who argued that Congress — rather than the executive branch — is responsible for writing immigration law, helped persuade the president to terminate the program, the two sources said, though White House aides caution that — as with everything in the Trump White House — nothing is set in stone until an official announcement has been made.

In a nod to reservations held by many lawmakers, the White House plans to delay the enforcement of the president’s decision for six months, giving Congress a window to act, according to one White House official. But a senior White House aide said that chief of staff John Kelly, who has been running the West Wing policy process on the issue, “thinks Congress should’ve gotten its act together a lot longer ago.”

Trump is expected to announce his decision on Tuesday, and the White House informed House Speaker Paul Ryan of the president’s decision on Sunday morning, according to a source close to the administration. Ryan had said during a radio interview on Friday that he didn’t think the president should terminate DACA, and that Congress should act on the issue.

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