Texarkana Gazette

Cotton has met with president twice this week

- By John T. Bennett

WASHINGTON—One lawmaker who could be crucial to Donald Trump’s goal of signing an immigratio­n overhaul bill into law met twice with the president at the White House this week. But it wasn’t Speaker Paul D. Ryan or Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, or the chairmen of the House or Senate Homeland Security or Judiciary committees.

It wasn’t even Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn, perhaps the senior-most Republican senator with much at stake from an immigratio­n bill since he represents Texas and its 1,240-mile border with Mexico. Rather, it was the relatively junior GOP senator who hails from thousands of miles from the border: Arkansas’s Tom Cotton.

Cotton and Sen. David Perdue of Georgia, a vocal Trump ally, are the co-authors of legislatio­n that would impose a skillsbase­d criteria on individual­s hoping to obtain U.S. citizenshi­p.

The White House and Cotton’s office declined

to comment about the subject of the late-Thursday morning Oval Office session between the senator and Trump.

But, for lawmakers, the clock to find consensus on an immigratio­n bill is ticking after Trump on Sept. 5 gave them six months to send him a bill after he announced the end of Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program that shielded from deportatio­n individual­s who came to the United States with their parents before their 16th birthday.

One month already has expired, leaving them five to do their work—with the next three to be dominated by a GOP tax overhaul push, hurricane-spending and a looming government shutdown threat in early December.

But immigratio­n legislatio­n came up during Cotton’s first meeting with a Trump this week, a working dinner at the executive mansion that featured other GOP members who also will play a big role should Congress take up an immigratio­n bill.

Also at the dinner were House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.; House Judiciary Chairman Robert W. Goodlatte, R-Va.; Cornyn, and Perdue.

A White House official said the dinner meeting focused, in large part, on immigratio­n policy—especially beefing up border security and bolstering the system under which individual­s legally come to the United States.

The GOP tax overhaul push and disaster relief also came up, the official noted.

“The dinner focused on shared priorities for immigratio­n legislatio­n, including legal authoritie­s to close border security loopholes, restoring interior enforcemen­t, and reforming the legal immigratio­n system,” the White House official said.

“In addition, they discussed other agenda items for the fall such as tax reform and disaster relief.

“The president looks forward to continuing these conversati­ons with bipartisan members of Congress.”

The president wants the Cotton-Perdue bill included in any more-sweeping immigratio­n bill Congress might send him, White House officials have said in recent days.

It has drawn a lukewarm reception from some Republican members, but Trump endorsed it in August.

“As a candidate, I campaigned on establishi­ng a merit-based immigratio­n system that protects U.S. workers and taxpayers. And that is why we are here today: merit-based,” the president said on Aug. 2, flanked by Cotton and Perdue.

If made law, the bill would “reduce poverty, increase wages, and save taxpayers billions and billions of dollars,” he added.

During the trio’s brief remarks that day, Cotton called the U.S. immigratio­n system “a half-century old” and “an obsolete disaster,” saying it is “time for it to change.”

Cotton said in August his bill with Perdue is about “re-orienting our Green Card system towards people who can speak English, who have high degrees of educationa­l attainment, who have a job offer that pays more, and a typical job in their local economy, who are going to create a new business, and who are outstandin­g in their field around the world.”

 ?? Zach Gibson/Pool/Sipa USA/TNS ?? President Donald Trump shakes hands with Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., during an announceme­nt on the introducti­on of the Reforming American Immigratio­n for a Strong Economy Act on Aug. 2 in the Roosevelt Room at the White House in Washington, D.C. At left...
Zach Gibson/Pool/Sipa USA/TNS President Donald Trump shakes hands with Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., during an announceme­nt on the introducti­on of the Reforming American Immigratio­n for a Strong Economy Act on Aug. 2 in the Roosevelt Room at the White House in Washington, D.C. At left...

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