Santa Fe New Mexican

Immigratio­n bills fail in U.S. Senate

Doubt rises on whether Congress can resolve fate of Dreamers

- By Ed O’Keefe and David Nakamura

WASHINGTON — The Republican-led Senate on Thursday blocked both President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n plan and a bipartisan alternativ­e, a failure that cast doubt on whether Congress will ever resolve the fate of hundreds of thousands of young undocument­ed immigrants.

In a series of afternoon votes, senators failed to muster enough votes for a Republican plan backed by Trump that would have granted legal status to 1.8 million young immigrants and spent at least $25 billion to bolster security along the U.S.-Mexico border. It also would have made changes to family-based legal migration programs and ended a diversity lottery system used by immigrants from smaller countries.

The vote was 39-60, well short of the 60 needed to move ahead.

The Senate also couldn’t produce enough votes for a bipartisan plan that would legalize the same number of undocument­ed immigrants and appropriat­e $25 billion for southern border security constructi­on projects over the next decade — not immediatel­y, as Trump wants. The bill also would have curbed family-based immigratio­n programs, but not to the extent Trump is seeking, and it said nothing about the diversity visa lottery program.

The vote was 54-45, short of the 60 necessary to move ahead.

The White House threatened a veto of that plan and in a tweet shortly before the vote, Trump called it a “total catastroph­e.”

The failed votes could plunge the nation’s immigratio­n system into further crisis, as millions of Dreamers are set to lose legal protection­s when the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA program is set to end March 5. Federal court challenges continue, meaning the program may continue under legal limbo until June.

The votes underscore­d the inability of Congress to resolve a problem that has vexed Republican and Democratic administra­tions despite repeated efforts to overhaul the nation’s immigratio­n system.

Senators also rejected a watered-down bipartisan plan to grant legal status to dreamers and provide billions in border security. Also coming up short of the necessary votes was a Republican plan to punish so-called sanctuary municipali­ties that refuse to help enforce federal immigratio­n laws.

Ahead of the votes, the White House pressed hard to scuttle the bipartisan immigratio­n plan that was emerging as the best hope for a legislativ­e deal and top GOP leaders were doing little to encourage bipartisan accord.

Trump tweeted that the bill “would be a total catastroph­e” and reiterated his support for a more conservati­ve alternativ­e offered by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, that Democrats have opposed.

“Voting for this amendment would be a vote AGAINST law enforcemen­t, and a vote FOR open borders,” Trump wrote. “If Dems are actually serious about DACA, they should support the Grassley bill!”

Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders also said in a statement that the administra­tion “strongly opposes” the proposal unveiled a day earlier.

The plan from the selfanoint­ed “Common Sense Coalition” would have made immigratio­n policy “worse by weakening border security,” Sanders said. If the plan reached Trump’s desk, his advisers would “recommend he veto it,” she added.

In another Thursday morning tweet, Trump appeared to reiterate his calls to end a diversity visa lottery program, which is not mentioned in a bipartisan plan unveiled late Wednesday. The issue of ending the program is what sparked Trump’s expletiver­idden tirade in a January Oval Office meeting with lawmakers.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said the debate must be concluded this week. “We’re doing everything in our power” to block the bill, said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss White House strategy.

The administra­tion official said the White House already had been in contact with individual Republican senators, as well as House leadership, asking them to oppose the bill. Plans were underway to ensure that key Cabinet members also lobby lawmakers, said the official, who added that the legislatio­n jeopardize­s a potential deal on dreamers — undocument­ed immigrants who have been in the country since they were children.

The Department of Homeland Security said just after midnight Thursday that the bill from a group headed by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., “destroys the ability” of the agency to enforce immigratio­n laws and represents an “egregious violation” of Trump’s immigratio­n framework.

“Instead of helping to secure the border as the President has repeatedly asked Congress to do,” the Homeland Security statement warned, “it would do the exact opposite and make our border far more open and porous.”

Responding to the statement about the bipartisan bill, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said he thought, “Who the hell wrote this? Because it sounded like something that came from a political hack, not DHS.”

Graham singled out White House domestic policy adviser Stephen Miller, who is driving much of the administra­tion’s opposition to the bipartisan plan.

“There are some crazy people around here. Just shut them out. This is the best shot you’ll ever get,” Graham said. “America is with us, Mr. President. You be with us; we can make this bill better.”

“We were surprised to see a bill that proactivel­y went backward in terms of enforcemen­t,” the administra­tion official said. The White House declined two requests from reporters to put the comments on the record.

The White House’s criticism came as the bipartisan group introduced a plan that would fulfill Trump’s calls to grant legal status to 1.8 million young undocument­ed immigrants and would appropriat­e $25 billion for southern border security constructi­on projects over the next decade — not immediatel­y, as Trump wants. The bill also would curb familybase­d immigratio­n programs and it says nothing about the diversity visa lottery program.

On Thursday morning, McConnell dismissed the plan. Democrats so far have “yet to bring forward a single proposal that gives us a realistic chance to make law,” he said. “That is, pass the Senate, pass the House and earn the president’s signature.”

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., blasted Trump, saying the president “has not been constructi­ve” during weeks of negotiatio­ns on immigratio­n policy and “seems eager to spike the latest bipartisan compromise potentiall­y with a veto.”

Defending the new bipartisan plan, Schumer admitted, “there’s a lot I don’t like in it, believe me. I think the wall will not accomplish anything, will be a terrible waste of money.”

 ?? ZACH GIBSON/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., right, leaves the Senate chamber Thursday. The Senate blocked a bipartisan proposal to protect young undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n.
ZACH GIBSON/BLOOMBERG NEWS Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., right, leaves the Senate chamber Thursday. The Senate blocked a bipartisan proposal to protect young undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n.

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