The move comes as the White House prepares to unveil its new immigration framework Monday, one that offers a pathway to citizenship for up to 1.8 million undocumented "Dreamers" who were brought to the country as children.
At least 23 Dreamers will be in the public galleries in the House of Representatives chamber as guests of Democratic lawmakers, according to a list provided today by a congressional aide.
House Democrat Scott Peters of California said he was "honored" to have Karen Bahena, who was brought by her parents across the border from Mexico in 2001 when she was eight years old, as his guest to Trump's speech.
Bahena, protected by the previous administration's deferred action that is set to expire on March 5 absent a fix by Congress, graduated from San Diego State University and aspires to be a nurse.
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"Outstanding contributors to society like Karen should not be forced out of our country," Peters said in a statement. "Instead, they should be embraced and celebrated for making the United States a better place."
The "Me Too" movement will also be well-represented.
At least 10 lawmakers are bringing sexual assault victims or women's rights activists as their guests, according to the list, as the nation experiences a reckoning over sexual misconduct.
Some prominent Democratic lawmakers have already said they will boycott the speech.
Congressman John Lewis, an American civil rights icon who once marched with Martin Luther King Jr, said he will not attend the January 30 address because Trump used a vulgar slur to describe some countries during a meeting with lawmakers about a possible bipartisan immigration deal.
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