The Borneo Post

US Republican­s eye immigratio­n action but divisions remain

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WASHINGTON: US Republican leaders appeared to stave off a party revolt over immigratio­n, but conservati­ves and centrists remained divided on a potential pathway to citizenshi­p for young people who entered the country illegally as children.

House Speaker Paul Ryan led a two-hour closed- door caucus meeting on the issue, which included how to resolve the years- old dispute over so- called ‘ Dreamer’ immigrants who are part of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals ( DACA) program.

Ryan said he would “work on a solution” with other Republican­s aimed at resolving the longstandi­ng issue, largely along the principles outlined by President Donald Trump earlier this year, which included boosted border security and substantia­l changes to legal immigratio­n.

But he urged his members against joining Democrats who seek to use a rare procedural move, known as a discharge petition, that would force votes on immigratio­n.

“Hopefully we can find a path ahead that is consistent with the four pillars that the president laid out and avoids a pointless discharge petition,” Ryan said.

Some 20 rebel Republican­s have joined the Democrats’ effort.

If just two or three more Republican­s sign on, they will reach the 218 signatures needed to force immigratio­n votes on the House floor late this month.

The Republican-led Congress failed earlier this year to pass immigratio­n reform proposals, including one championed by Trump that would have resolved the legal status of 1.8 million immigrants.

With Republican­s facing tough re- election prospects in November, pressure has built on lawmakers to work out a solution on immigratio­n, with several moderates joining the effort to force a vote.

Several rank- and- file Republican­s left Thursday’s meeting confident that the rebels were held at bay – at least temporaril­y. But congressma­n Mark Meadows, chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, stressed that divisions remained.

“There is no consensus,” he said.

The question of what a pathway to citizenshi­p might look like for up to 1.8 million immigrants “remains still the most difficult issue,” Meadows said.

“Leadership will take all the input and try to boil that down into a legislativ­e framework in the coming days,” he added.

White House legislativ­e director Marc Short, who sat in on the meeting, said the focus remained a bill that addressed Trump’s priorities.

“There are some tweaks to it, but it’s similar,” he told reporters. — AFP

 ??  ?? California state assembly member Miguel Santiago speaks as people hold signs to protest against Trump’s executive order to detain children crossing the southern US border and separating families outside of City Hall in Los Angeles. — Reuters photo
California state assembly member Miguel Santiago speaks as people hold signs to protest against Trump’s executive order to detain children crossing the southern US border and separating families outside of City Hall in Los Angeles. — Reuters photo

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