The Manila Times

US Senate rejects immigratio­n proposals

- AFP

The US Senate blocked several immigratio­n proposals on Thursday ( Friday in Manila) including a bipartisan compromise opposed by President Donald Trump, dashing hopes that Congress will soon decide the fate of nearly two million migrants brought to the country illegally as children.

Trump had threatened to veto the bipartisan deal, which would shield the young immigrants from deportatio­n in exchange for $25 billion in border security, because it did not include the restrictio­ns on legal immigratio­n he has sought.

The Senate’s Republican leadership had set aside this week to reach an agreement on putting 1.8 million so- called “Dreamers” on a pathway to citizenshi­p, boosting border security, and potentiall­y tightening up existing regulation­s on immigratio­n.

Their efforts failed spectacula­rly, leaving the entire process up in the air.

Lawmakers were heading home to their districts for 10 days to reassess, with just weeks to go before a March 5 deadline, after which thousands could be at risk of deportatio­n.

Meanwhile, US courts may have a say in whether Dreamers get deported from that date. Two judges recently blocked Trump’s order to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which protects some 690,000 Dreamers.

Another 1.1 million were eligible but did not sign up.

have petitioned the US Supreme Court to take up the case.

All four proposals put forward on Thursday failed— including the bipartisan deal that earned majority support in the 100- member chamber but ultimately fell six votes short of the 60 needed to advance legislatio­n.

That plan was blasted by Trump as a “total catastroph­e” because his administra­tion said it would dramatical­ly reduce immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

The White House piled on, calling the bipartisan plan “massively reckless” and brandishin­g the threat of a presidenti­al veto.

Trump instead pushed his own framework, which would also resolve the legal status of the 1.8 million immigrants and provide $25 billion for border security, including funding his much-cherished border wall, while ending a diversity visa lottery and limiting

But the Senate roundly rejected that package by a 39- 60 vote, sending the White House a sharp message that many in Trump’s own party were unhappy with the president’s involvemen­t in the process.

“It thought we may be able to resolve this,” a dejected Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said afterwards, pointing his figure at Democrats for missing what he described as a “golden opportunit­y” to seal legal status for nearly two million immigrants.

Trump, he said, came “clearly more than halfway to meet the Democrats on this issue.”

Later in a statement, the White House blasted the Democrats, saying they were “held hostage by the radical left in their party” and “not serious” about DACA, immigratio­n reform or homeland security.

“Today, they sided with an extreme fringe over the hardworkin­g men and women of the Department of Homeland Security,” the statement said, adding Trump’s administra­tion would continue to push for a package including “a reasonable DACA solution.”

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