Chicago Sun-Times

Lynn Sweet: Rauner demands more info from White House on Syrians

Gov appears to want veto power over admitting Syrians

- LYNN SWEET Follow Lynn Sweet on Twitter: @LynnSweet Email: lsweet@suntimes.com

The sticking point between the governor and Obama administra­tion remains whether the federal government will provide informatio­n about refugees before arrival.

WASHINGTON — The Rauner administra­tion, concerned about Syrian refugees coming to Illinois, said Monday that an Obama White House move to provide more informatio­n — intended to resolve an impasse — fell far short of what is needed.

In essence, it appears that Rauner wants veto power over the refugees sent to Illinois.

The sticking point between Rauner and the White House over Syrian refugees fleeing a civil war remains whether the federal government will give Illinois informatio­n about them before their arrival.

White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, in a letter to Rauner and other governors obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times, said the White House will speed up giving states nationalit­y, age range and gender of refugees — but after they arrived and with no names attached.

McDonough said the White House would work with the National Governors Associatio­n at its next meeting, and in the meantime the State Department would provide state-specific generic informatio­n about refugees monthly in a password-protected website.

That move would streamline and speed up a system that already pushes out much of that state-bystate data.

“This proposal responds to governors’ input while protecting the privacy of refugee families,” McDonough said in his letter.

After the Paris terrorist attacks, Rauner and about 30 other governors — all but one Republican — called for a temporary halt to Syrian refugees coming to the U.S., not convinced the layers of screenings, which take more than a year, could root out a terrorist posing as a refugee.

After Rauner said Illinois would have a resettleme­nt pause, for a practical matter, nothing changed. In an effort to assure Rauner on the security front, Secretary of State John Kerry and Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson sent the governor a letter providing details of the vetting process for Syrian refugees.

McDonough and Rauner personally talked about the situation, but the impasse has yet to be resolved.

Rauner spokeswoma­n Catherine Kelly said in an email that the letter “completely ignores Governor Rauner’s request that background vetting informatio­n be provided to state officials prior to refugee resettleme­nt in Illinois.”

“Rather than briefing state officials on the background vetting informatio­n compiled by the intelligen­ce community prior to resettleme­nt, the White House wants to provide limited informatio­n after resettleme­nt has already occurred.

“Given the close coordinati­on that exists between state and federal officials on a range of issues related to homeland security, the White House’s continued refusal to provide vetting informatio­n to states prior to resettling refugees is truly puzzling,” she said.

The Obama administra­tion set a goal of resettling 10,000 Syrians in the U.S. in 2016.

Meanwhile, a bigger potential vulnerabil­ity is the 20 million visitors coming to the U.S. each year from the 38 nations that are part of the Visa Waiver Program — not refugees who are subject to multiple layers of screenings over the course of more than a year.

On Monday, the Obama White House announced tougher screenings for the visa waiver visitors, including bolstering the ability of the U.S. to determine who may have traveled to conflict zones, a sign that an individual may be training to be a terrorist.

While the Obama White House and Congress may be on a collision course over refugees — before leaving for the Thanksgivi­ng break, the House passed a bill to make it harder for Iraqis and Syrians to get in the U.S. — there may be more common ground when it comes to cracking down on visa waivers.

 ??  ??
 ?? | MUHAMMED MUHEISEN/AP ?? Syrian refugees on the Greek island of Lesbos last week.
| MUHAMMED MUHEISEN/AP Syrian refugees on the Greek island of Lesbos last week.
 ?? SUN-TIMES LIBRARY (LEFT); GETTY IMAGES FILE (RIGHT) ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administra­tion wants the Obama White House to provide more detailed informatio­n on Syrian refugees.
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY (LEFT); GETTY IMAGES FILE (RIGHT) Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administra­tion wants the Obama White House to provide more detailed informatio­n on Syrian refugees.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States