Qatar Tribune

Can Miami’s Republican Congresswo­man Fix The Broken Immigratio­n System? She’s Giving It A Try

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OFFERING creative and original solutions to closing one of the country’s biggest gaping wounds — its broken immigratio­n system — has failed to gain traction in Congress for far too long, as both Republican­s and Democrats who have attempted it can attest.

Just ask Florida’s Sen. Marco Rubio and Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, and Democrat Bob Menendez of New Jersey. Each has jumped into the fray only to be whacked on the nose with a rolled newspaper by their own party.

But the issue is important and demands thoughtful, extended debate. It’s good to see that another lawmaker, Miami’s U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar, is pushing for a solution. Migrants pay On Tuesday, Salazar introduced an ambitious immigratio­n-reform bill in Congress that she believes addresses “the core issues that for decades have kept the two main political parties apart on immigratio­n reform.

Under her proposal, 12 million illegal immigrants could gain a path to citizenshi­p, but it would cost them $10,000 for the privilege. It’s an ambitious proposal, helping the undocument­ed, including DREAMers, become legal, while at the same time allocating billions of dollars to increase border patrols. The immigrants themselves would pay for their own processing.

It’s an original idea — some might say improbable — to overhaul a frustratin­g and unfair system. As usual, the devil is in the details. But Salazar is in there, mixing it up and proposing the first bipartisan immigratio­n bill introduced in Congress in 10 years. If nothing else, the conversati­on should not be quashed.

Here’s how Salazar summed it up to the Miami Herald: “We are fixing legal immigratio­n (and) it won’t cost the taxpayer one cent. It will be fully paid by the people who are here and will be getting” into the pathway set out to legalize their status.

Democratic co-sponsor Salazar’s bill is being cosponsore­d by US Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-Texas, who will be the co-lead, and it will be supported by Rep. Hillary Scholten, DMichigan, Rep. Lori ChávezDeRe­mer, R-Oregon, and Rep. Jenniffer González Colón, resident commission­er of Puerto Rico. That does spell bipartisan­ship, and it is welcomed.

Salazar, herself, has been on this path before, introducin­g similar legislatio­n that went nowhere. The difference between her two bills is that the new proposal addresses the concerns of both parties. This bill would address immigrants who have been living illegally in the United States for more than five years, allowing them to come out of the shadows, with the exception of those who have committed a crime.

They would be granted residency and work permits to live here under a program called the “Dignity Status,” but they would have to pay $5,000 to be accepted. After seven years, immigrants would qualify for “Redemption Status,” which would lead to citizenshi­p at a cost of another $5,000.

It’s an intriguing propositio­n. The criticism that U.S. taxpayers foot the bill for the undocument­ed immigrants would possibly die down, and maybe so would the hatred of undocument­ed immigrants — especially in Gov. DeSantis’ Florida — who, in theory, would be paying their own way.

It’s a long shot for Salazar & Co., but an overdue step that injects some compassion into this fraught issue.

It won’t be easy. It never is when it comes to immigratio­n.

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