Chattanooga Times Free Press

House GOP leaders struggle with immigratio­n bill

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WASHINGTON — As badly as things have gone for immigratio­n legislatio­n in the Senate, it’s not looking any easier in the more conservati­ve House.

Republican leaders there are scrambling to find enough GOP votes to pass a measure that’s even more restrictiv­e than a proposal by President Donald Trump that flopped spectacula­rly in the Senate on Thursday. Compoundin­g those divisions are pressures from some of the House’s most conservati­ve members, who are casting the effort as a pivotal test for Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis.

“It is a, the, defining moment for this speaker,” said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., who leads the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, which helped force former Speaker John Boehner from his job in 2015. “If he gets it wrong, it will have consequenc­es for him, but it will also have consequenc­es for the rest of the Republican Party.”

Ryan aides did not respond to a request for comment on Meadows’ remark. But underscori­ng party rifts, some Republican­s defended the speaker and his work on the issue.

“Any time you allow one member or a small group of members to dictate overall policy for the country, it is an unfair scenario,” Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif., who’s opposing the conservati­ve legislatio­n, said Friday. “I just don’t think our speaker’s going to give in to any type of threats.”

Even if House leaders manage to push the measure through their chamber, it would be dead on arrival in the closely divided Senate. Democrats there could ensure its demise because any immigratio­n measure would need 60 votes to survive, meaning bipartisan agreement is mandatory.

All of that underscore­s how unlikely it is that Congress will approve sweeping election-year legislatio­n on the subject, including something to help young “Dreamer” immigrants stay in the U.S.

The divisions bode poorly for a bill by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., and Homeland Security Committee Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, that conservati­ves back and leaders have said they’d try bringing to a House vote.

The measure would provide only temporary protection­s for Dreamers, young immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children who still lack permanent authority to live in this country. Trump offered a chance for citizenshi­p for 1.8 million of them.

The bill would provide money for the border wall with Mexico that Trump wants. And like Trump’s plan, it would limit the relatives that legal immigrants could sponsor for citizenshi­p and end a lottery that distribute­s visas to people from diverse countries.

But it goes further. It reduces legal immigratio­n by about 25 percent annually and requires employers to use the online E-Verify program to validate that their workers are legal. It withholds federal grants from “sanctuary cities” that don’t help federal agents catch immigrants in the U.S. illegally and would make it easier to deport immigrants in the country illegally who are gang members or have been arrested repeatedly for drunk driving.

House Democrats uniformly oppose the proposal. So to succeed Republican­s must supply 216 votes — a simple majority in a chamber with four vacant seats.

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