Chicago Sun-Times

Lipinski would back DACA ‘ if it comes to the floor’

- MARK BROWN Follow Mark Brown on Twitter: @ MarkBrownC­ST Email: markbrown@ suntimes. com

Rep. Daniel Lipinski said Wednesday he would support protecting young undocument­ed immigrants faced with losing their temporary legal status if such legislatio­n reaches the House floor for a vote.

Lipinski’s statement was viewed as a minor breakthrou­gh for Illinois religious and business groups trying to win support for the 800,000 immigrants who were protected under former President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals ( DACA) program.

President Donald Trump has said he will allow the DACA program to expire March 5. That would leave its recipients, the children of illegal immigrants often known as DREAMers, subject to losing their work permits and to possible deportatio­n. Such an outcome would be an outrage.

Lipinski has been the only Illinois Democrat not committed to supporting DACA. He voted against its forerunner, the DREAM Act, when it was brought to a vote in 2010.

Like his father before him, Rep. Bill Lipinski, the younger Lipinski has hewed to the conservati­ve end of the Democratic Party.

But faced with a likely primary challenge from the party’s progressiv­e wing, Dan Lipinski may be trying to evolve.

“I support DACA if it comes to the floor for a vote,” he told me by phone Wednesday after I sought to clarify his position.

The congressma­n said he has been working with a bipartisan group of lawmakers to work out a deal along the lines discussed by Trump and Democratic legislativ­e leaders tying DACA to increased border security.

He said the increased security he favors does not include a border wall or “internal enforcemen­t.”

“I think it makes sense. That’s the way to get this done right now,” Lipinski said.

“But if something is brought to the floor to protect the DACA recipients, I do support that,” he added.

That may be a relatively safe offer for Lipinski to make.

Republican leaders have shown no inclinatio­n to move the DACA legislatio­n without other immigratio­n concession­s.

Democrats are demanding a “clean bill” on DACA and have recently threatened to withhold Democratic votes from legislatio­n needed to authorize continued federal spending, which could cause a partial government shutdown.

Rep. Luis Gutierrez of Chicago, in announcing his decision this week not to seek reelection, said he will not vote for the spending authorizat­ion until those imperiled by the DACA repeal are protected.

But he seemed skeptical his party’s congressio­nal leaders, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer, will follow through on the threats, suggesting they might be just as happy to let Republican­s take the blame for the ensuing mess.

Republican­s control a majority in both chambers of Congress but don’t have enough votes to pass the spending measures on their own.

The current funding bill is set to expire Dec. 8.

Regardless of that deadline, immigratio­n activists are pushing hard for a vote before the end of the year to keep the issue from bleeding into the 2018 election season, which could make Republican support even less likely.

In addition to Lipinski, Rep. Peter Roskam, a Republican who represents the western suburbs, has been receiving extra attention. Roskam’s constituen­ts include 2,700 DACA recipients, the most of any Illinois congressio­nal district represente­d by a Republican.

A group of religious leaders held an hourlong conference call this week with Roskam to seek his support for the DACA legislatio­n. Roskam declined.

“He was very gracious, but he was noncommitt­al. He said he thinks it has to be tied to increased border security,” said Father Corey Brost, representi­ng Priests for Justice for Immigrants.

On Wednesday afternoon, Roskam was scheduled to speak with Exelon chairmanem­eritus John Rowe, who is co- chairman of the Illinois Business Immigratio­n Council.

“I would like to see Peter show a little more courage on this issue,” said Rowe, a Republican who fights for immigratio­n reform as both an economic and moral issue.

Rowe believes that “if the bill just comes to the floor, I think virtually every Illinois congressma­n will support it.”

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Dan Lipinski
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Peter Roskam
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