February 11, 2026

Democrats Rally behind DACA as Top Court Mulls Program’s Fate

111419-26-Dreamer-DACA-Immigration
Democrats Rally behind DACA as Top Court Mulls Program's Fate

Democrats Rally behind DACA as Top Court Mulls Program's Fate

Democratic congressional leaders criticized Trump and Republicans for failing to pass legislation to protect Dreamers.


Democrats Rally behind DACA as Top Court Mulls Program's Fate

By Ted Hesson


Immigrants known as โ€œDreamersโ€ and senior Democrats rallied behind the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program on Tuesday as the U.S. Supreme Court considered whether to let President Donald Trump end it.

Hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside the courthouse on a gray and chilly morning to show their support for the โ€œDreamers,โ€ immigrants who were brought to the United States illegally or overstayed a visa as children.

DACA, launched in 2012 by Democratic former President Barack Obama, provides roughly 661,000 such immigrants with deportation protection and work permits. Trump, a Republican known for his hardline immigration policies, announced plans in September 2017 to phase out DACA, but was blocked by lower courts.

Demonstrator Anel Medina, a 28-year-old DACA enrollee and oncology nurse at Penn Medicine in the Philadelphia area, said the program changed her life. She was born in Mexico City, and her mother brought her to the United States at age 5. She was a college student and living without legal status when DACA was created in 2012.

โ€œI was able to get a job … finish nursing school,โ€ she said. โ€œIt was the moment I was waiting for.โ€

Democratic congressional leaders criticized Trump and Republicans for failing to pass legislation to protect โ€œDreamers.โ€ The Democratic-led House passed a bill in June that would give legal status to an estimated 2.7 million people, but the Republican-controlled Senate has not taken up the measure.

โ€œThe presidentโ€™s relentless scapegoating of immigrants is the most un-American thing I can think of,โ€ Chuck Schumer, the top Senate Democrat, said during a news conference with roughly two dozen DACA recipients in the U.S. Capitol.

Trump tweeted in the morning that he would strike a deal with Democrats to allow DACA recipients to stay if the Supreme Court rules against the program, but also said many program enrollees are โ€œvery tough, hardened criminals.โ€ The DACA program bars applicants with serious criminal convictions.

Demonstrators at the protest outside the courthouse carried signs that read โ€œhome is hereโ€ and โ€œdefend DACA.โ€ Several hoisted depictions of monarch butterflies, which migrate from parts of the United States to Mexico and have become a symbol of the โ€œDreamersโ€ movement.

No DACA opponents were evident outside the Supreme Court, but Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which favors lower levels of immigration, argued that Trumpโ€™s termination was lawful.

โ€œPresident Obamaโ€™s initial action was undertaken informally, and so the policy can be undone in precisely the same manner,โ€ Stein said in a statement.

Arisaid Gonzalez Porras and her brother Sergio, both DACA recipients and undergraduate students at Georgetown University, said the court should affirm the programโ€™s legality, but that a permanent fix is needed.

โ€œWhen the program was rescinded it made a lot of us realize that DACA is just a Band Aid,โ€ she said.

Sammie Chai, a 19-year-old freshman at American University whose parents came to the United States from Malaysia, said she attended the demonstration in solidarity with โ€œDreamersโ€ and other immigrants in the face of Trumpโ€™s hardline policies.

โ€œHe exemplifies xenophobia,โ€ she said of Trump. โ€œEveryone showing up here today, weโ€™re just showing that we will not stand for that.โ€


Originally published by Reuters, 11.12.2019, republished for educational, non-commercial purposes.