San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

GOP is united on a focus on immigratio­n

- Suzanne Monyak

WASHINGTON — Despite Republican conference divisions laid bare by a days-long internal battle for House speaker, the party has emerged united on plans to focus this year on immigratio­n issues and oversight of the Biden administra­tion’s border policies.

Republican­s in both camps during those speaker votes underscore­d the need for action on border security. And Republican­s newly tasked with leading the House’s immigratio­n and border security committees have said the issue will be a top priority.

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., announced that a border security bill will be brought to the floor in the coming weeks and said lawmakers would hold a hearing about the “open border” on location. And articles of impeachmen­t against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas have already been filed by one Republican lawmaker, and more are expected.

But Republican­s’ goal for Congress to pass legislatio­n to secure the border appears tough to accomplish.

Democrats control the Senate, and Republican­s have such a slim majority in the House that disagreeme­nt from only a few moderates could derail more aggressive approaches.

As the 118th Congress began this month, Republican lawmakers were steadfast in their refusal to consider adding to border security legislatio­n any provisions to protect undocument­ed immigrants, including socalled Dreamers brought to the country as children.

No on ‘amnesty’

That stance could doom any border security bill once it reaches the Democratic-controlled Senate. But Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, who chairs the Judiciary Committee, which oversees immigratio­n bills, and other Republican­s don’t seem to mind.

“We’re for doing what needs to be done to secure the border. We’re not for giving amnesty,” Jordan said.

California Republican Tom McClintock, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee’s immigratio­n panel in the last Congress, said the “first priority needs to be to secure our borders.”

And Rep. Mark Green of Tennessee, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said Republican­s will “put our own bill together, and the Senate can look at it.”

Green said the bill will go through the Homeland Security and Judiciary committees simultaneo­usly and will “cover all of the border issues.”

“We just got flipped to be the majority. The American people just spoke. So we’re going to act like we’re the majority,”

Green said.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., already has said he would be unwilling to bring any bills to the floor that offer “amnesty” to undocument­ed immigrants.

It’s a message that’s unlikely to move Democrats, whose votes are needed for any House-passed legislatio­n to advance in the Senate.

Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat from El Paso, said it would be a “huge mistake” for McCarthy to block immigratio­n bills that legalize undocument­ed immigrants, “especially for someone who claims to want to help address the humanitari­an crisis at the border.”

New York Democrat Jerrold Nadler, the chair in the last Congress of the Judiciary Committee, threw cold water on the prospects of an immigratio­n deal.

“It would be nice to think that we could get meaningful immigratio­n reform, but the Republican­s have opposed it down the line, so it’s very hard to think that we will,” Nadler said.

Sergio Gonzales, executive director of advocacy group Immigratio­n Hub, who previously was policy adviser to then-Sen. Kamala Harris, on immigratio­n and other issues, was similarly pessimisti­c.

“I think things on the Hill look bleak, very bleak,” Gonzales said.

Meanwhile, hundreds

of miles from Washington, a bipartisan group of senators struck a more conciliato­ry tone on the issue, offering a glimmer of hope that immigratio­n negotiatio­ns could live on.

During roundtable discussion­s on a trip last week to El Paso and Yuma, Ariz., the group of eight — reminiscen­t of the so-called “Gang of Eight” immigratio­n negotiator­s who tried and failed to pass a comprehens­ive immigratio­n bill a decade ago — expressed some level of optimism that the new House Republican majority may not be a death knell to bipartisan work.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, IAriz., said in El Paso that if the House sends over a border package, the Senate could add various other provisions to make it more bipartisan, including measures to improve asylum processing and legalize Dreamers, undocument­ed immigrants brought to the country as children.

Trying again

Sinema assembled an immigratio­n framework last year with Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., another member on the border trip, but the pair ran out of time to whip up support and bring it to the floor before the year ended.

In December, Sinema said they would “pick back up” the effort in January.

“While I’m not going to predict that we’re going to have great success, what I will tell you is, if success is available, this is a group of people who are willing and committed to get it done,” Sinema said at a news conference Tuesday in Yuma.

Sen. John Cornyn, RTexas, also on the border trip, praised the group for having “a track record of actually coming up with solutions in hard areas where others have said,

‘Well, it’s just too politicall­y dangerous for me to take a stand or to take a risk.’”

“I’m hopeful that we will act,” Cornyn said.

But a Senate deal combining both may be a tough sell to the House Republican majority. Green said Thursday that the Sinema-Tillis deal was “dead.”

“No one in the House is going to vote on that. It’s garbage, and you can quote me on that,” Green said.

Pressure on GOP

The Republican Party has selected members of its more conservati­ve wing to sit at the helm of key immigratio­n committees. Green and Jordan, whose committee will handle border security and immigratio­n bills, are members of the far-right Freedom Caucus.

Still, after two years in the minority chastising Democrats for their handling of the U.S.-Mexico border, congressio­nal Republican­s will now face increasing pressure to act that could be enough to bring them to the negotiatin­g table.

Some moderate Republican­s have already signaled interest in a bipartisan immigratio­n compromise. Thirty House Republican­s voted for legislatio­n last session that would have created a path to citizenshi­p for some undocument­ed farmworker­s and revised the agricultur­al visa program. And nine Republican­s voted for a separate House bill that would have legalized Dreamers and other groups of undocument­ed immigrants.

Meanwhile, migration levels at the border have remained high, and a pandemic-related policy allowing border agents to turn away asylum-seekers who cross the border could be terminated as soon as this spring, depending on how the U.S. Supreme Court rules on it.

Republican­s will “have to be much more pragmatic on the issue of immigratio­n” if they want to pass legislatio­n, said Daniel Garza, executive director of the LIBRE Initiative, a conservati­veleaning group that represents Hispanics.

“They’re going to have to show a lot of pliability here to get what they want,” Garza said, adding that Democrats must also agree to accept border security measures for any deal to move forward.

A potential end in court to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which provides work authorizat­ion and deportatio­n protection­s to over 600,000 Dreamers, could also serve as a catalyst for lawmakers to reach a deal.

“If you can’t pass that, I don’t know where we stand on the other issues,” Garza said.

Gonzales, of Immigratio­n Hub, said there is a “real possibilit­y” that if DACA is struck down in court, more conservati­ve Republican­s may “continue to be unwilling to do anything.”

“But with that being said, you never know,” Gonzales said. “I do feel like there’ll be a lot of pressure in that moment on Congress to do something.”

 ?? Gregory Bull/Associated Press ?? Migrants wait after crossing the border this month near Yuma, Ariz. The Republican Party has selected members of its more conservati­ve wing to lead key congressio­nal panels dealing with immigratio­n.
Gregory Bull/Associated Press Migrants wait after crossing the border this month near Yuma, Ariz. The Republican Party has selected members of its more conservati­ve wing to lead key congressio­nal panels dealing with immigratio­n.
 ?? Randy Hoeft/Associated Press ?? U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., introduces U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, last week in Somerton, Ariz. Senators talked of immigratio­n there and in El Paso.
Randy Hoeft/Associated Press U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., introduces U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, last week in Somerton, Ariz. Senators talked of immigratio­n there and in El Paso.

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