Bangkok Post

Senate stumbles in immigratio­n fix

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WASHINGTON: The US Senate’s muchtouted freewheeli­ng immigratio­n debate failed to materialis­e on Tuesday, raising prospects of Congress and President Donald Trump falling short in striking a deal on border security and the legalisati­on of young immigrants.

Lawmakers have spoken for months about the need to craft a bipartisan compromise after Mr Trump scrapped a programme that allowed so-called Dreamers brought to the United States illegally as children to stay, and gave Congress until March 5 to find a solution.

Some 690,000 Dreamers registered under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) programme, and 1.1 million others were eligible but did not sign up.

Last month, Mr Trump introduced a proposal that would put all 1.8 million of them on a pathway to citizenshi­p, in exchange for stiff cutbacks on overall immigratio­n and funding for a massive wall on the US border with Mexico.

Senate Republican­s transformi­ng that plan into legislatio­n say it has the best chance of becoming law.

But Republican­s who control the Senate need Democratic votes to get an immigratio­n bill across the finish line, and the opposition party has panned the presidenti­al plan, arguing for a narrower measure that addresses the Dreamers and border security.

A bipartisan solution — and one that would gain the 60 votes necessary to advance legislatio­n in the 100-member Senate — has proven elusive.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell promised Republican­s and Democrats a week of rare open-ended debate in which they could introduce immigratio­nrelated measures.

By Tuesday, Senate floor action was gummed up by procedural hurdles, as both parties failed to agree on the opening amendments to debate.

“The sooner we get started the better, because we’ll need to wrap this up this week,” Mr McConnell warned, citing the need to move on to other legislativ­e priorities.

“Senators have had plenty of time to prepare.”

The president weighed in, heaping pressure on both sides.

“Wouldn’t it be great if we could finally, after so many years, solve the Daca puzzle,” Mr Trump tweeted on Tuesday. “This will be our last chance, there will never be another opportunit­y!”

Lawmakers scrambled to find a path forward.

 ?? AFP ?? US First Lady Melania Trump hugs US Surgeon General Jerome Adams as US President Donald Trump applauds after he spoke at a National African American History Month reception in the White House on Tuesday in Washington, DC.
AFP US First Lady Melania Trump hugs US Surgeon General Jerome Adams as US President Donald Trump applauds after he spoke at a National African American History Month reception in the White House on Tuesday in Washington, DC.

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