Story highlights
- "I actually don't think he should do that," Ryan said
- A number of moderate Republicans alongside Democrats support the program
(CNN)House
Speaker Paul Ryan on Friday gave a major boost to legislative efforts
to preserve protections for young undocumented immigrants -- and urged
President Donald Trump to not tear up the program.
Trump
told reporters Friday he was still mulling the decision. The White
House press secretary said a decision would be announced Tuesday.
Responding
to a question about Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, on
his hometown radio station WCLO in Janesville, Wisconsin, Ryan said
Congress was working on a legislative fix to preserve the program.
"I
actually don't think he should do that," Ryan said of Trump's
consideration of terminating the program. "I believe that this is
something that Congress has to fix."
Ryan's
statement offers the most public support by anyone in the Republican
congressional leadership for some sort of legislation to protect the
"Dreamers" under DACA.
Asked
about Ryan's comments and a timeline for making an announcement, White
House press secretary Sarah Sanders would only say the decision is still
being finalized.
"We're in the process of finalizing that decision and those details, and we'll announce that on Tuesday," Sanders said.
She added the decision is "weighing on" Trump.
"He's making sure he takes the diligent time and effort and attention that this very important issue deserves," she said.
The
popular Obama administration program -- which gives protections from
deportation to undocumented immigrants that were brought to the US as
children to work or study -- has long been targeted by Republicans as an
overreach of executive authority.
Nevertheless,
a number of moderate Republicans alongside Democrats support the
program and have offered legislation that would make the protections
permanent.
Ryan, who worked on
comprehensive immigration reform before he became part of House
leadership, endorsed that approach in the interview.
"President
(Barack) Obama does not have the authority to do what he did ... we've
made that very clear," Ryan said in the radio interview. "Having said
all of that, there are people who are in limbo. These are kids who know
no other country, who were brought here by their parents and don't know
another home. And so I really do believe there that there needs to be a
legislative solution."
Trump's decision
Asked whether he's made a decision on DACA, Trump said: "Sometime today, maybe over the weekend."
"We love the Dreamers," he said.
The
Trump administration has been discussing for weeks what to do about
DACA, responding to the deadline on an ultimatum issued by 10 state
attorneys general, led by Texas. The threat: Sunset DACA by September 5
or the states will try to end it in court.
Discussions
have heated up this week as officials have met to chart a path forward.
While a decision had been possible Friday, and one source familiar had
believed a decision was pending Friday morning, by midday, sources
familiar with the deliberations did not expect a decision before the
weekend. Later, Sanders set the new timeline of Tuesday.
Parts
of the Department of Homeland Security, which administers DACA, have
been told to prepare for a decision but have not been given any
potential details of what a decision may be.
Sources inside and outside the administration said
the White House continues to explore buying itself time and is also
considering allowing the attorneys general to proceed with their threat.
That course of action could
potentially remove pressure from the White House, where the President
has promised to act with "heart" on the matter and give Congress time to
pass a legislative fix, and one source said it was under consideration.
Any action by the President to
sunset DACA would put immediate pressure on Congress to act, something
the White House and a senior congressional source recognize would be a
challenge with many other pressing priorities at the moment, from Harvey
relief to the debt ceiling to government spending. A go-slow approach
on DACA is preferred, the congressional source added.
Big congressional boost
Ryan
has long been sympathetic to the plight of Dreamers. At a CNN town hall
at the beginning of the year, Ryan was asked by a young woman protected
under DACA whether he wanted her deported. He said he was working with
the Trump administration and seeking a "humane solution."
"What we have to do is find a way to ensure that you can get right with the law," the speaker told the young woman.
Nevertheless,
Ryan has also voted alongside Republicans for years in efforts to strip
funding from deferred action or end it, and Ryan's office emphasized he
is not supportive of the executive version of the program.
Ryan
spokeswoman AshLee Strong emphasized after the interview: "The speaker
does not agree with President Obama's DACA overreach. He believes it is
Congress's responsibility to set immigration law."
That woman from the town hall, Angelica Villalobos, told CNN Friday that she hopes Ryan's comments aren't "too late."
"He
did nothing for the last eight months," Villalobos said. "I feel like
it's a last-ditch effort, saying something about DACA. I don't know if
it's a little too late. And I really hope and I wish that he done or
said something sooner. No matter what happens, Ryan is just as
responsible as Trump if we lose DACA protection."
Until
now, leadership has not helped the push by moderate Republicans to
advance legislation to do so. Four different options have been
introduced in Congress, including two bipartisan solutions led by Sens.
Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, and Dick Durbin, an
Illinois Democrat. Another proposal from Florida Republican Rep. Carlos
Curbelo has entirely Republican support and is expected to be introduced
in a similar form in the Senate by North Carolina Republican Thom
Tillis.
In addition to Ryan's
endorsement, another conservative boost on Friday came from Utah Sen.
Orrin Hatch, a staunch conservative who has in the past supported
immigration reform.
"I've urged
the President not to rescind DACA, an action that would further
complicate a system in serious need of a permanent, legislative
solution," Hatch said in a statement. "Like the President, I've long
advocated for tougher enforcement of our existing immigration laws. But
we also need a workable, permanent solution for individuals who entered
our country unlawfully as children through no fault of their own and who
have built their lives here. And that solution must come from
Congress."
According to an aide,
Hatch called Trump Thursday to talk DACA. Hatch's "focus was explaining
to POTUS that rescinding now would make the situation more complicated,
and Congress should take the lead on a permanent solution," the aide
said, adding: "Those talks are already happening."
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's office did not have anything immediately on where DACA stands in the Senate.
Colorado
Rep. Mike Coffman, a moderate Republican, announced on Thursday he
would try to force a vote on one of the bipartisan bills when Congress
returns next week through what's known as a discharge petition, which
would require a majority of House members to sign on to work. The
speaker's office had no comment on that effort.
The
bill Coffman is supporting would give DACA-like protections to
qualified applicants for three years, but would require renewal by
Congress to continue after that.
DACA currently awards renewable two-year permits to applicants who meet the requirements.
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