Why these DACA recipients traded living in the U.S. for other countries

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Why these DACA recipients traded living in the U.S. for other countries
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Three former DACA recipients explain why they chose to leave the U.S.

Since 2012, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals has protected more than 800,000 immigrants brought to the U.S. as children from deportation, allowing them to work, drive and travel legally.Former President Trump moved to end DACA soon after taking office, but the program narrowly survived when the Supreme Court ruled in 2020 that his administration had done so improperly. DACA became embroiled in litigation and court rulings have limited the program to renewals.

Those feelings compounded when Hernandez found out on a call with a fellow “Dreamer” who was considering a move that they’d been banned from returning to the U.S. for 10 years as a penalty for having entered without authorization.— Our Network for the Wellbeing and Advancement of Relocated Dreamers — a support group for people who have left or are considering leaving the U.S.

Touba, who was born in Ivory Coast and moved to Virginia with her family at age 7, had a feeling there was something deeper related to her immigration status. But she didn’t press her parents about it, she said, and decided to go to the University of Connecticut with the help of a scholarship. She said she felt increasingly uneasy with the state of the country and had lost all hope that DACA recipients would gain a path to citizenship.“I was very happy for her, but I think it was bittersweet for me,” she said. “We were both in it together. And then when she got her green card ... she was able to leave, so it was kind of like me being left behind. That’s when I started thinking I’ve had enough.

They were open about her immigration status. In elementary school, she once came home from a career fair and asked them about college — they replied that she might not be able to go. In high school she signed up for a driver’s education course just for the experience, only to be embarrassed when the instructor repeatedly reminded her that she needed to provide a Social Security number.

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