Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ryan vows vote on immigratio­n

Wants legislatio­n brought to floor before election

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s struggled Thursday to find consensus on the future of undocument­ed immigrants who were illegally brought into the country, but House Speaker Paul Ryan still vowed to bring legislatio­n to the floor for a vote before the midterm election.

Ryan, R-wis., held a closeddoor meeting with Republican lawmakers at odds over proposed legislatio­n and how to treat the roughly 800,000 Dreamers in this country.

The Dreamers, including 14,000 in Nevada, were protected from deportatio­n until President Donald Trump terminated the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Following the meeting, Ryan said legislatio­n could be voted on before the November election. However, the speaker provided no timeline, and he conceded that a compromise has yet to be reached.

Ryan said the next step is to “put pen to paper” and write a bill to present to the full House.

Rank-and-file Republican­s remained doubtful anything would happen soon, given the divide between Republican­s on immigratio­n.

“Nothing is imminent,” Rep. Mark Amodei, R-nev., told the Las Vegas Review-journal after the meeting.

Amodei is one of 23 Republican­s who have joined Democrats and signed a discharge petition that would force GOP leaders to hold a vote on a series of immigratio­n bills.

Supporters of the discharge petition need just three more signatures to force GOP leaders to bring the series of immigratio­n bills to the floor.

Amodei said Ryan was adamant he didn’t want the discharge petition to drive the process.

A successful discharge petition would be seen as an embarrassm­ent to GOP leadership.

One of the bills being pushed for a vote is a bipartisan approach that would grant citizenshi­p after 12 years to Daca-eligible immigrants who have served in the military, attended college or are gainfully employed.

Conservati­ve Republican­s are loath

to agree to any legislatio­n that provides earned citizenshi­p, which they have branded as “amnesty.” They have rallied around a bill that would offer temporary protection from deportatio­n but not a path to citizenshi­p.

Ryan said Republican­s would continue to work to write legislatio­n that resembles Trump’s pillars of immigratio­n policy released earlier this year. That would include a wall on the Southwest border, as well as cuts to legal immigratio­n.

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

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Paul Ryan

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