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The story of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals is one of a valuable program with broad public support that is undermined by dysfunctional politics.
Study after study has shown DACA, which allows certain young immigrants to avoid deportation temporarily and receive renewable work permits, is beneficial not just for those in the program, but the country at large.
Think tanks ranging from the liberal Center for American Progress to the libertarian Cato Institute estimate the end of DACA would cost the U.S. hundreds of billions of dollars in lost economic activity and taxes over the next decade.
"The repeal of DACA will place an extreme hardship and burden on U.S. businesses, on local communities and on the American economy," according to a statement from Democrats on the Senate Joint Economic Committee.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce also has been a strong supporter of DACA, perhaps even more so with the current labor shortage. More than a dozen Republican political donors recently sent a letter warning GOP congressional leaders the loss of DACA employees could further fuel inflation.
More important is the large-scale disruption of lives, which would be hard to fathom. With the program continually on the brink of being shut down, hundreds of thousands of people are threatened with being thrown out of the country they have lived in since they were kids.