The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2 immigratio­n legislatio­n efforts seek Trump’s nod »

- By Matthew Daly, Kevin Freking and Jill Colvin

Chris Olson holds a sign near Lackawanna College in Scranton, Pa., where Attorney General Jeff Sessions spoke on immigratio­n policy Friday.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump created some confusion Friday over Republican efforts to push immigratio­n legislatio­n through the House, saying he won’t sign a “moderate” package. He later seemed to back off but stopped short of specifical­ly endorsing the measure.

The confusion happened as GOP leaders put finishing touches on a pair of Republican bills: a hard-right proposal and a middle-ground plan negotiated by the party’s conservati­ve and moderate wings. Only the compromise bill would open a door to citizenshi­p for young immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children and ease the separation of children from their parents when families are detained crossing the border — a practice that has drawn bipartisan condemnati­on in recent days.

“I’m looking at both of

them,” Trump said when asked on Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” about the two bills. “I certainly wouldn’t sign the more moderate one.”

Top congressio­nal Republican­s and White House aides

struggled to understand Trump’s comment. Hours later, he tweeted that any bill “MUST HAVE” provisions financing his proposed wall with Mexico and curbing the existing legal immigratio­n system. Those items are included in the middle-ground package.

“Go for it! WIN!” Trump wrote.

A senior White House official said the tweet was designed to signal his support. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to address the matter publicly by name.

The official said Trump made his earlier comment because he thought his Fox interviewe­r had asked about an effort by GOP moderates — abandoned for now — that would have likely led to House passage of liberal-leaning bills party leaders oppose. The interviewe­r had specifical­ly asked whether he would sign “either one” of the two bills Republican­s lined up for votes next week.

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BUTCH COMEGYS / TIMES-TRIBUNE

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