Lodi News-Sentinel

Senate GOP blocked bill to help Venezuelan­s

- By Alex Daugherty

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate will leave for a six-week break without passing a bill to grant Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, for Venezuelan­s even though the House of Representa­tives passed a similar measure last week.

Two Democratic senators, Bob Menendez of New Jersey and Dick Durbin of Illinois, attempted to pass the House’s TPS bill by unanimous consent on the Senate floor Tuesday. The move, which is essentiall­y a voice vote, bypasses Senate procedure in an attempt to pass legislatio­n quickly, but it fails if one senator opposes it.

Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee opposed Menendez and Durbin’s request, so the fast-track effort to pass TPS failed.

Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, who co-sponsored a Senate version of the House TPS bill with Menendez, said the full Senate will not vote on the bill before leaving for six weeks.

“Not this week, I don’t anticipate movement on it,” Rubio said in an interview with the Miami Herald. “I anticipate hopefully getting the administra­tion to do something. That’s what we’ve been working on behind the scenes here, we’ve made a little progress on it. We have 17 votes already scheduled this week, a bunch of nominees, the spending bill, the veto override. The votes this week have already been scheduled.”

The major hurdle for passing TPS legislatio­n are conservati­ve Republican­s in Congress along with a group of White House officials. They are wary of extending TPS to Venezuela while trying to end the program in countries like Haiti, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua. Every House Democrat and a minority of Republican­s like Rubio, Florida Sen. Rick Scott and Miami Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart are in favor of granting TPS to Venezuelan­s.

Granting TPS would give Venezuelan­s the ability to live and work legally in the U.S. There are an estimated 170,000 Venezuelan­s in Florida, the most of any U.S. state.

The House and Senate first introduced TPS bills in January, but House Democrats waited until days before leaving for six weeks to fast-track their bill.

Lee argued that fast-tracking TPS in the Senate does not give Republican­s enough time to consider the House bill and offer changes to it.

“Just passing this unanimousl­y is not the way we should be passing this legislatio­n,” Lee said. “We’ve got amendments to propose.”

Miami Democratic Rep. Donna Shalala, who led efforts to fast track the TPS bill last week, said she wasn’t surprised that Republican­s blocked the bill.

“While I’m extremely disappoint­ed in the actions of Sen. Lee and his Republican colleagues who blocked this life-saving legislatio­n, I can’t say that I’m surprised,” Shalala said in a statement. “For years now, Republican­s have been wrapping themselves in the Venezuelan flag and claiming to be champions for the restoratio­n of Venezuelan democracy, yet at virtually every opportunit­y to help the Venezuelan people, the Republican leadership in the Senate, House, and Administra­tion consistent­ly let them down.”

Rubio said he has no interest in passing the TPS bill sponsored by Diaz-Balart and Rep. Darren Soto, D-Kissimmee, because “our version is better.”

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