San Francisco Chronicle

Senator’s first bill signals focus on immigratio­n

- By Tal Kopan

WASHINGTON — California Sen. Alex Padilla unveiled his first piece of legislatio­n since arriving in the Senate on Friday, a bill that would offer millions of immigrant essential workers and their families a path to citizenshi­p.

Choosing the topic for his symbolic first bill is indicative of the Democrat’s efforts to make his presence felt immediatel­y in Washington on matters of immigratio­n, a contentiou­s issue that has stymied lawmakers for decades.

In an interview, Padilla said his Citizenshi­p for Essential Workers Act was an easy choice for his first piece of legislatio­n as a senator on a personal and policy level. He noted his Mexican immigrant parents spent four decades working

in the service industry — his father as a shortorder cook and his mom cleaning houses. Padilla is the first Latino senator from California and one of only a handful in the Senate, and he has already used that position to voice concerns of the Latino community in Washington.

“I think nothing speaks to the moment more than COVID response and fairness for essential workers,” Padilla told The Chronicle. “On a parallel track, we know that immigratio­n reform is long overdue in the United States of America and there are no states that have more at stake in immigratio­n reform than the state of California.”

On its own, it’s virtually impossible the bill would become law. The legislatio­n would apply to some legally present immigrants and undocument­ed immigrants alike, providing an immediate opportunit­y to start the naturaliza­tion process for an estimated 5 million or more people who work in more than a dozen essential industries, including health care, agricultur­e, service, child care and manufactur­ing.

Republican­s have long opposed almost any legalizati­on of even the most sympatheti­c cases of undocument­ed immigratio­n unless it was paired with stringent measures to crack down on future illegal immigratio­n.

But the legislatio­n is emblematic of how Padilla hopes to shape the perpetual debate on immigratio­n as it unfolds in coming months. Padilla has also been one of the lawmakers leading a more expansive immigratio­n bill from President Biden, which includes measures like his essential workers bill. It would also would legalize other population­s like “Dreamers” who came to the U.S. as children. Padilla said that legislatio­n is still the “ideal package” and that he fully supports it, but his bill is a complement that highlights a specific area of the broader deal.

“A standalone measure allows us to uplift specific elements of a comprehens­ive package as you continue to gain momentum and support,” Padilla said.

Padilla is working with some powerful Democrats on the measure. His lead counterpar­t in the House is Texas Rep. Joaquin Castro, who recently served a twoyear term as the chair of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus. Also on the bill is Rep. Ted Lieu, DTorrance (Los Angeles County).

In the Senate, Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a popular progressiv­e who ran for president in the last election, is a cosponsor.

In a news conference introducin­g the bill, the lawmakers noted the potential economic advantages of legalizing the status of workers, which also opens the door to aggressive tactics to get it passed. Warren called for using a procedural trick that allows economic legislatio­n to pass the Senate with a simple majority vote instead of the usual 60vote requiremen­t to advance legislatio­n, called reconcilia­tion, saying it should be done “right now.” Such a move would delight progressiv­es and immigratio­n advocates who demand a win from the Biden administra­tion on the issue, but could set up a political quagmire for leadership that also has to defend vulnerable moderate lawmakers in swing districts.

Democratic leadership has positioned Padilla to be a major player on immigratio­n as he navigates his new job as well as a reelection campaign in two years. He is appointed to fill only the remaining term of his predecesso­r, Vice President Kamala Harris.

Padilla was named the chair of a subcommitt­ee on the Senate Judiciary panel that oversees immigratio­n policy, a significan­t nod for a firstterm senator, which will allow him to shape almost any legislatio­n that moves through the committee.

He said he asked for the position, and when it was granted, he changed the name of the committee from the Subcommitt­ee on Border Security and Immigratio­n to the Subcommitt­ee on Immigratio­n, Citizenshi­p and Border Safety “to potentiall­y set a different tone than the cruelty of the Trump administra­tion border and immigratio­n policies of the last four years,” he said.

“I’m here, I’m ready to work, I know it’s urgent and I’m just so thrilled that this chairmansh­ip gives me a unique opportunit­y to help advance this policy as quickly as possible,” Padilla said.

Castro told The Chronicle that he began working with Padilla on the issue even before the senator was sworn in, after he was named to replace Harris.

The pair have focused on the issue during the coronaviru­s pandemic as one of fairness — noting that Americans have had an outpouring of appreciati­on for the frontline health care, food industry, service industry and janitorial staff, among others, who have risked their lives to keep America running over the past year.

“Alex Padilla is a strong partner in Senate, especially to build a fairer immigratio­n system,” Castro said. “He not only brings subject matter expertise, but also reflects the lived experience­s of millions of Americans. ... This effort has real potential to meaningful­ly improve people’s lives.”

 ?? Al Drago / Associated Press ?? Sen. Alex Padilla’s first bill would offer a path to citizenshi­p for millions of immigrant essential workers.
Al Drago / Associated Press Sen. Alex Padilla’s first bill would offer a path to citizenshi­p for millions of immigrant essential workers.

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