Austin American-Statesman

House immigratio­n bill defeated 121-301

Vote offers latest display of GOP’s split in Congress on immigratio­n issue.

- Thomas Kaplan ©2018 The New York Times

WASHINGTON — The House resounding­ly rejected a far-reaching immigratio­n overhaul Wednesday, despite a last-minute plea from President Donald Trump, as inter- nal divisions in the Republican ranks continued to hobble legislativ­e efforts to protect young immigrants in the country illegally. The 121-301 vote was an embarrassm­ent to both Trump and House GOP leaders who spent weeks trying

to bring together GOP hard-liners and immigratio­n moderates — and ended up alienating many in both camps. In the end, nearly as many Republican­s voted against the bill, 112, as for it, 121.

The defeat provided the latest display of the Republican Party’s disunity in Congress on immigratio­n. And it highlighte­d the continuing inability of both the House and Senate to resolve the fate of young immigrants who were brought to the country illegally as children. Many of those immigrants have been shielded from deportatio­n under an Obama-era program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, but Trump moved last year to end the program.

Republican­s in the House are now likely to turn their focus to narrower legislatio­n that would seek to keep migrant families together at the border, an issue that senators are also looking to address. But with the Fourth of July approachin­g and lawmakers close to returning home for a recess, it was not clear how quickly a narrower measure might move forward.

The frustratio­ns over immigratio­n in Congress are matched by the confusion in the Trump administra­tion. A federal judge in California issued a nationwide injunction late Tuesday temporaril­y stopping the Trump administra­tion from separating children from their parents at the border and ordering that all families already separated be reunited within 30 days.

The Justice Department replied with an appeal to Congress.

“Last night’s court decision makes it even more imperative that Congress finally act to give federal law enforcemen­t the ability to simultaneo­usly enforce the law and keep families together,” the department said in a statement Wednesday morning.

“Without this action by Congress, lawlessnes­s at the border will continue, which will only lead to predictabl­e results: more heroin and fentanyl pushed by Mexican cartels plaguing our communitie­s, a surge in MS-13 gang members, and an increase in the number of human traffickin­g prosecutio­ns,” the Justice Department statement said.

Hours before Wednesday’s vote, Trump took to Twitter and implored the House — in all capital letters — to pass the bill, which would have provided more than $23 billion for border security, including for his promised wall, while keeping migrant families together at the border and providing a path to citizenshi­p for the young immigrants.

But coming just days after Trump had told Congress to forget about immigratio­n until after the midterm elections, his last-minute change of mind did not prove persuasive. On the eve of the vote, the bill appeared all but certain to be heading toward defeat, in part because of the mixed messages from the president.

“There’s still a divide, and you could see it in the vote last week, and this week there’s probably a little bit more of a divide,” Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., the majority whip, conceded on “Fox & Friends” on Wednesday morning.

The bill considered Wednesday would have made significan­t changes to the immigratio­n system and generally adhered to the president’s stated requiremen­ts for any overhaul. It would have limited family-based immigratio­n and would have eliminated the diversity visa lottery, which admits immigrants from countries that do not send many people to the United States.

But despite the painstakin­g negotiatio­ns among Republican­s to try to arrive at a broad immigratio­n overhaul that would be acceptable to different ideologica­l factions within their conference, the resulting compromise still ran into trouble with conservati­ves. It has been derided on the right as “amnesty” for offering a pathway to citizenshi­p for the young immigrants.

The vote Wednesday followed a push by moderate Republican­s, many facing difficult re-election bids, to compel the House to act to protect those young immigrants. They attempted to use a parliament­ary maneuver known as a discharge petition to force a series of votes on immigratio­n, but fell two signatures short of what they needed.

For now, the DACA program has been kept alive by the courts, but the failure of Congress to agree on a legislativ­e fix means hundreds of thousands of young immigrants in the country illegally will still face an uncertain future.

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