President Donald Trump said today that a program that protects immigrants who were brought to the US illegally as children is "probably dead," casting a cloud over already tenuous negotiations just days before a deadline on a government funding deal that Democrats have tied to immigration.
At issue is the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program created by President Barack Obama to shield hundreds of thousands of these individuals, known as "Dreamers," from deportation.
Trump, who has taken a hard stance against illegal immigration, announced last year that he will end the program unless Congress comes up with a solution by March.
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Republicans and Democrats were already at odds over funding the government, and the negotiations became more complicated after Democrats, whose votes are needed to pass a government funding bill, insisted immigration be included.
Government funding expires midnight Friday without a deal in place, and some government functions will begin to go dark.
Further roiling the talks are comments by Trump during an Oval Office meeting in which he questioned the need to admit more Haitians to the US, along with Africans from "shithole" countries, according to people briefed on the conversation but not authorised to describe it publicly.
He also said in the Thursday meeting he would prefer immigrants from countries like Norway instead. The White House has not denied that Trump said the word "shithole," though
Trump did push back on some depictions of the meeting. A confidant of Trump's told The Associated Press that the president spent Thursday evening calling friends and outside advisers to judge their reaction on his inflammatory remarks.
Trump wasn't apologetic and denied he was racist, instead blaming the media for distorting his meaning, said the confidant, who wasn't authorised to disclose a private conversation and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The president also rejected as insufficient an immigration deal drafted by the bipartisan group of lawmakers who attended that meeting. The deal had included a pathway to citizenship for the "Dreamers" that would take up to 12 years, as well as USD 1.6 billion for border security, including Trump's promised wall along the US-Mexico border.
Trump's staunchest supporters consider any route to citizenship for the "Dreamers" amnesty for lawbreakers.
The president has said any deal must include funding for the wall as well as changes to make the immigration system a more merit-based structure.
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