The Columbus Dispatch

‘Dreamer’ deal sought by House GOP

- By Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — A leader of House Republican moderates said Thursday that a tentative deal with conservati­ves is being discussed to help young “Dreamer” immigrants stay in the U.S. legally. It was unclear whether the plan was a potential breakthrou­gh in the GOP’s long-running schism over immigratio­n or would devolve into another failed bid to bridge that gap.

The proposal emerged the same day that House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said leaders will craft an attempt at a compromise on the issue that Republican­s could embrace. Ryan is hoping an accord will derail threats by GOP centrists to force a series of House votes on immigratio­n that leaders say would be divisive and damage the party’s electoral prospects in November.

The flurry underscore­d the escalating pressure on Republican­s to address immigratio­n, an issue pitting centrists representi­ng Hispanic and moderate voters against conservati­ves with deep-red constituen­ts sympatheti­c to President Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant outbursts. Painfully aware of those divisions, leaders had seemed happy to sidestep the issue until the moderates’ rebellion forced their hand.

Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif., said that under an offer from the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, young immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children could get a new visa that would let them stay in the country for eight years. He expressed uncertaint­y over what would happen after that, but he said participan­ts have characteri­zed the proposal as a bridge to the legal immigratio­n system — which suggests a pathway to remaining in the U.S. permanentl­y.

Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R-Fla., Denham’s fellow moderate leader, said that although talks have focused on providing legal status to Dreamers, the proposal “does not involve a special pathway nor a visa unique to any specific group.”

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