Donald Trump delivered a message to the Latino Coalition Legislative Summit last week, telling attendees that the failure to protect Dreamers from his administration’s own policy is Congress’ fault. More specifically, he urged the Latino Coalition to blame Democrats for not embracing the White House’s immigration plan.
Trump insisted that Democrats “don’t care about our immigration system” which is why the future of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program — a program the president rescinded — is in doubt.
Over the weekend, at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania, the president went a little further:
“[Democrats] want to stop DACA. DACA is their issue. But I’m willing to go along and get it done. […]
“I offered a deal that was so good you can’t refuse, right, like the mob pictures. I will give you a deal that is so good, you can’t refuse. I made a deal. I gave a deal so good, they could not refused. And I did it because I thought they were going to refuse. And they did. And they are getting killed now by the DACA recipients. They are getting killed.”
None of this reflects reality in any way, though in this specific instance, I’m less interested in the fact that Trump is lying about DACA and more interested in why Trump is lying about DACA.
The facts are unambiguous: after assuring Dreamers that he wouldn’t punish them, Trump ended the DACA program. Scrambling to protect these young immigrants, Democrats offered the president six different bipartisan agreements, each of which Trump either rejected or walked away from.
Meanwhile, the president pushed a non-negotiable far-right alternative: he’d extend protections to Dreamers if Congress gave him $25 billion for a border wall and dramatic cuts to legal immigration. Democrats, independents, immigration advocates, and quite a few Senate Republicans said this was simply a bridge too far. In a GOP-led Senate, Trump plan generated just 39 votes.
It was, to borrow the president’s phrasing, an offer that was quite easy to refuse.









