Chris Carr, Attorney General for Georgia. January 18 2016. Photo: Law.com
In a statement, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said heâd prefer to give the administration time.
âAs Attorney General, I take seriously my duty to defend the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution and laws of the state of Georgia. We have continuously and clearly taken the position in ongoing legal cases that DACA does not confer legal status,â Carr said. âIt is important to remember that it is properly the role of Congress to address immigration issues from a legislative perspective. I am aware that this is a complex and emotional issue, and I would prefer to give the new Administration â which has been vocal about this issue â appropriate time to consider any additional actions that should be taken.â
Georgians React To Uncertain Future Of DACA Program
ELLY YU ⢠JUL 17, 2017
Photo: Elly Yu/WABE
DACA recipients are shown at a rally to demand in-state tuition in Georgia.
The future of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program is uncertain.
CREDIT ELLY YU / WABE
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The future of a program that protects young immigrants from deportation is uncertain. Last week, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly told a group of lawmakers that the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, will likely not stand up in the courts.
That has Jessica Colotl concerned about whatâs next.
Earlier this year, Coltol, 29, briefly lost her deportation protection status. She later won in court and got her DACA reinstated, but the program itself is up in the air.
The program was created by President Barack Obama through executive action in 2012. If DACA ends, she worries she and others could face deportation.
âItâs scary,â she said. âIt would basically paralyze the lives of Americans at heart. Weâre talking about people who came to the United States as young as 2 or 3 months old.â
Jaime Rangel, 26, was brought to the U.S. when he was an infant. He agreed the uncertain future of DACA scared him, but he said heâs also hopeful of a more permanent solution for the nearly 800,000 immigrants in the United States protected by DACA. About 23,000 DACA recipients are in Georgia.
âWeâve got to see this as somewhat of an opportunity to try to pass bipartisan immigration reform because, at the end of the day, I think every DACA recipient in this country knew that sooner or later DACA would cease to exist,â he said.
The Trump administration has so far left the DACA program intact, and President Donald Trump has said heâd treat DACA âwith heart.â
Meanwhile, attorneys general in 10 states, led by Texasâs attorney general, have sent a letter to the Trump administration saying they would sue the administration if it doesnât end DACA. Georgia isnât part of that letter.
In a statement, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said heâd prefer to give the administration time.
âAs Attorney General, I take seriously my duty to defend the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution and laws of the state of Georgia. We have continuously and clearly taken the position in ongoing legal cases that DACA does not confer legal status,â Carr said. âIt is important to remember that it is properly the role of Congress to address immigration issues from a legislative perspective. I am aware that this is a complex and emotional issue, and I would prefer to give the new Administration â which has been vocal about this issue â appropriate time to consider any additional actions that should be taken.â See here to read the rest of the WABA story.