San Antonio Express-News

Cornyn mixed on Dreamers legislatio­n

- By Brandon Mulder

The claim: “While Sen. Cornyn is for secure borders, he strongly supports legalizati­on for Dreamers.” — ad for Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas.

The 30-second ad began airing in San Antonio, Austin, the Rio Grande Valley, Dallas and Houston on Sept 12. In it, a voice-over describes the senator’s position on Dreamers.

PolitiFact ruling: Half True. It’s true that Cornyn’s voting history has supported the legalizati­on of Dreamers, but there are also examples of his opposition to bills that package Dreamer protection­s with other items.

Discussion

Cornyn released a Spanishlan­guage campaign advertisem­ent in September that says the senator “fights for all Texans,” including immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children, known as Dreamers.

There’s no doubt that Cornyn has voiced his support over the years for protecting young Dreamers from deportatio­n. “In America, we don’t hold children responsibl­e for the mistakes their parents made,” Cornyn has said. And his aides point to numerous occasions when he has cast votes on bills designed to provide Dreamers a path to citizenshi­p.

Nonetheles­s, immigrant advocates and Cornyn’s Democratic detractors are quick to highlight other occasions when legislatio­n with Dreamer protection­s was scuttled or opposed by the senator. A clear picture of Cornyn’s voting record on Dreamers, however, is tangled in the messy politics of immigratio­n reform.

The most popular form of legislatio­n aimed at granting conditiona­l permanent resident status to young immigrants was introduced in 2001 and is known as the Developmen­t, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, or DREAM Act. In 2003, during his first year in the Senate, Cornyn and a majority of the Senate Judiciary Committee approved a version of the act. But the bill went no further.

At that point, Cornyn’s voting record on the DREAM Act and Dreamers becomes more mixed. In 2007, another version

of the act was derailed after Cornyn and a majority of senators supported a procedural move that defeated it.

In 2013, Cornyn opposed a broad-based immigratio­n reform bill crafted by a bipartisan group of senators that would have provided a pathway to citizenshi­p for 11 undocument­ed immigrants, including Dreamers. Cornyn said at the time he opposed the bill because it lacked border security components.

In 2018, during the latest congressio­nal showdown over funding for President Donald Trump’s border wall, Cornyn cosponsore­d the Trumpbacke­d Secure and Succeed Act while opposing a bill backed by a bipartisan group of senators known as the Common Sense Coalition.

Both efforts would have offered a path to citizenshi­p for 1.8 million Dreamers and allocated $25 billion for a southern border wall, but the bills differed in other ways.

The Secure and Succeed

Act would have canceled the Diversity Visa Program, which awards green cards via a lottery, and limited family-based immigratio­n to spouses and unmarried children under 18. According to the libertaria­n Cato Institute, these moves would have reduced legal immigratio­n by 44 percent.

The bipartisan “Common Sense” plan would have prohibited parents from using their Dreamer children’s newly granted citizenshi­p to apply for citizenshi­p themselves, according to a bill descriptio­n on the website of Sen. Susan Collins of Maine.

Neither bill was successful.

Cornyn’s voting record on the DREAM Act, however, is not the only metric by which his support for Dreamers should be measured, said Cornyn spokesman Drew Brandewie.

And Brandewie pointed to numerous occasions when the senator has expressed his support for Dreamers.

“I am sympatheti­c to their plight,” Cornyn said last year, “and I want to work to find a solution that would allow them to become American citizens.”

The language used in the advertisem­ent — that the senator “strongly supports legalizati­on for Dreamers” — should be interprete­d narrowly so as not to include his position on the DREAM Act itself, Brandewie said.

For example, in 2017 Cornyn was part of a bipartisan working group that sought a solution for Dreamers after the Trump administra­tion signaled its intent to end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — a move that has been held up in the courts.

In 2018, Cornyn criticized a lawsuit that Texas and six other states filed to end DACA. Cornyn said the suit provided no solution and that the state needs the “pool of very productive, good young people” being protected by DACA from deportatio­n.

“One can support legalizati­on without supporting or voting for the DREAM act,” Brandewie said.

But to Frank Sharry, executive director of the progressiv­e immigrant advocacy group America’s Voice, making a distinctio­n between supporting the DREAM Act and supporting Dreamers is splitting hairs.

“He technicall­y can say he’s voted for the DREAM Act, but it’s his opposition that’s the major feature of his career,” Sharry said.

Cornyn’s ad is “hoodwinkin­g Latino voters into thinking he’s for a priority in that community when he spent the last 15 years underminin­g it,” Sharry said.

Cornyn said during an interview last week with the Austin AmericanSt­atesman’s editorial board that the stalemate on Dreamers and the tendency for bills to get packaged with other items “is probably my single greatest frustratio­n and disappoint­ment.”

“It’s sort of like a Christmas tree. People keep adding different things to it, and it almost always seems to collapse under its own weight,” Cornyn said.

The version of the DREAM Act currently before Congress could provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for more than 2 million Dreamers. Cornyn opposes the legislatio­n because it would give Dreamers access to federal student financial aid that’s not available to citizens — a provision that Brandewie said is “wholly unrelated” to the legalizati­on of Dreamers.

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 ?? Bloomberg file photo ?? A protest takes place at the Supreme Court on June 18, the day the court blocked President Donald Trump from ending Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.
Bloomberg file photo A protest takes place at the Supreme Court on June 18, the day the court blocked President Donald Trump from ending Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.

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