This article has been updated.
Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida said on Wednesday that if he becomes president he’ll end protections for undocumented immigrants whose parents brought them into the country illegally during their youth — even if Congress doesn’t act.
“It will have to end at some point,” the Republican candidate said after an event in Manchester, New Hampshire, referring to President Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which applies to so-called “Dreamers.”
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The program, he said, “is going to end, and the ideal way for it to end is that its replaced by a reform system that creates an alternative — but if it doesn’t, it will end. It cannot be the permanent policy of the United States.”
The senator’s remarks on the issue were his strongest yet, as Rubio — who once pushed for a bi-partisan effort to pass a comprehensive immigration overhaul — has previously said he wants to pass immigration reform through Congress before ending DACA.









