" 'It just shows everyone how broken and unfair our court system is when the opposing side in a case (such as DACA) always runs to the 9th Circuit and almost always wins before being reversed by higher courts,' Trump wrote in a tweet.
The White House suggested the court's ruling would make a legislative deal harder to obtain.
"We find this decision to be outrageous," White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. "An issue of this magnitude must go through the normal legislative process."
In announcing his intent to end the Obama-era program, which he viewed as an abuse of executive power, Trump also pushed Congress to develop a legislative fix, speaking favorably of the young immigrants and suggesting he did not necessarily want them to be deported.
One simple solution pushed by Democrats would be passage of the Dream Act, a bill that would give the young immigrants a path to legal status, and eventual citizenship, if they continue to be law-abiding.
Republicans in Congress, who mostly oppose DACA, are angling for a broader deal that would include elements of Trump's promised border wall with Mexico and other immigration reforms they are seeking.
Top conservatives, including Rush Limbaugh, warned Republicans off any deal that would include legal status — often derided as "amnesty" — for those here illegally.
Leaders of both parties met Wednesday in House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy's office to negotiate what Republicans called a timeline toward a deal."
http://beta.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-trump-daca-20180110-story.html
The White House suggested the court's ruling would make a legislative deal harder to obtain.
"We find this decision to be outrageous," White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. "An issue of this magnitude must go through the normal legislative process."
In announcing his intent to end the Obama-era program, which he viewed as an abuse of executive power, Trump also pushed Congress to develop a legislative fix, speaking favorably of the young immigrants and suggesting he did not necessarily want them to be deported.
One simple solution pushed by Democrats would be passage of the Dream Act, a bill that would give the young immigrants a path to legal status, and eventual citizenship, if they continue to be law-abiding.
Republicans in Congress, who mostly oppose DACA, are angling for a broader deal that would include elements of Trump's promised border wall with Mexico and other immigration reforms they are seeking.
Top conservatives, including Rush Limbaugh, warned Republicans off any deal that would include legal status — often derided as "amnesty" — for those here illegally.
Leaders of both parties met Wednesday in House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy's office to negotiate what Republicans called a timeline toward a deal."
http://beta.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-trump-daca-20180110-story.html