The Guardian (USA)

US Senate releases draft bill to toughen border measures while securing aid to Ukraine and Israel

- Ed Pilkington and Joanna Walters in New York and agencies

US senators on Sunday evening released the details of a highly anticipate­d $118bn package that pairs federal enforcemen­t policy on the USMexico border with wartime aid for Ukraine, Israel and others, launching a long-shot effort to push the bill past sceptical, hard right House Republican­s – whom Democrats accuse of politicizi­ng immigratio­n while being in thrall to Donald Trump.

The proposal is the best chance for Joe Biden to bolster dwindling US wartime aid for Ukraine – a major foreign policy goal that is shared by both the Senate’s top Democrat, Chuck Schumer, and top Republican, Mitch McConnell. The Senate was expected this week to hold a key test vote on the legislatio­n, but it faces a wall of opposition from conservati­ves.

Joe Biden urged the US Congress to pass the legislatio­n, for the sake of immigratio­n reform and aid for US allies.

The bill “includes the toughest and fairest set of border reforms in decades,” he said in a statement issued by the White House.

He added: “Now, House Republican­s have to decide. Do they want to solve the problem? Or do they want to keep playing politics with the border? I’ve made my decision. I’m ready to solve the problem.”

Crucially, with Congress stalled on approving $60bn in Ukraine aid, the US has halted shipments of ammunition and missiles to Kyiv, leaving Ukrainian soldiers outgunned as they try to come out on top of a grinding stalemate with Russian troops.

“The United States and our allies are facing multiple, complex and, in places, coordinate­d challenges from adversarie­s who seek to disrupt democracy and expand authoritar­ian influence around the globe,” Schumer said in a statement.

In a bid to overcome opposition from House Republican­s, McConnell had insisted last year that border policy changes be included in the national security funding package.

The bill would overhaul the asylum system at the border with faster and tougher enforcemen­t, as well as give presidents new powers to immediatel­y expel migrants if authoritie­s deemed themselves overwhelme­d with the number of undocument­ed people requesting asylum at the internatio­nal boundary.

The tough new measures discussed among select senators for months include a new federal requiremen­t to “shut down” the US-Mexico border if more than 5,000 undocument­ed people cross into the US daily and plans to swiftly throw out economic migrants.

Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, who broke from the Democratic party in 2022 to become an independen­t, told CBS’s Face the Nation earlier on Sunday some of what she and other Senate negotiator­s have been working on.

When the number of migrants crossing without an appointmen­t with the US authoritie­s approaches 4,000 people a day, the US government would be granted the power to voluntaril­y turn away all people presenting at border stations, to give time for the asylum applicatio­n processing to catch up, she said.

At other times, migrants would be taken into short-term detention as their claims for asylum were rapidly assessed. Anyone failing to meet the standards for a claim would be “swiftly returned to their home country”, Sinema said.

“We believe that by quickly implementi­ng this system, individual­s who come for economic reasons will learn very quickly that this is not a path to enter our country and will not take the sometimes dangerous or treacherou­s trek to our border,” she told the Sunday morning TV show.

Alongside the faster deportatio­n provisions, the draft bill would also speed up the time needed to process successful asylum applicatio­ns. “Folks who do qualify for asylum will be on a rapid path, six months or less, to start a new life in America,” Sinema said.

The draft Senate bill meets several of the demands that have been raised by Republican­s who have accused the Biden administra­tion of failing to secure the US border. In particular, it proposes an end to the system of allowing people to remain in the US while their asylum applicatio­ns are processed – a procedure Republican­s dismissive­ly call “catch and release”.

As many as 10,000 migrants a day have been encountere­d crossing the US-Mexico border without necessary immigratio­n papers or an appointmen­t with the US authoritie­s.

But the Senate bill is likely to be blocked by Republican leaders in the

US House who are following Donald Trump’s lead and opposing the deal. The former president, who is running for re-election, has made it clear that he does not want to see Biden presented with a legislativ­e win on the border crisis.

Mike Johnson, the Republican House speaker, has said the Senate bill would be “dead on arrival” were it to reach his chamber. On Saturday he also made a pre-emptive move that could further imperil the chances of the Senate bill ever becoming law by announcing that he would bring to a vote on the House floor a separate $17.6bn military aid package for Israel.

Johnson was asked by NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday whether his aid for Israel plan was a ruse to kill the Senate compromise deal on the border. He was also asked whether he was merely doing Trump’s bidding, with Trump “calling the shots”.

“Of course not,” the speaker said. “He’s not calling the shots, I am calling the shots for the House – that’s our responsibi­lity.”

Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic minority leader in the House, derided House Republican­s, in interview on the ABC US network’s This Week Sunday show, as “wholly owned subsidiari­es of Donald Trump”.

With the numbers of migrants turning up at the border remaining high, and with the presidenti­al election year getting under way, immigratio­n is set to continue to cause ructions on both sides of the political aisle.

On Sunday Nikki Haley, Trump’s only remaining rival in the race to secure the Republican nomination, accused Trump in a CNN interview of “playing politics” with the border with his attempt to scupper the Senate deal.

The Associated Press and Reuters contribute­d reporting

 ?? ?? A child runs along the US-Mexico border fence in Calexico, California. Photograph: Stephanie Maze/Getty Images
A child runs along the US-Mexico border fence in Calexico, California. Photograph: Stephanie Maze/Getty Images

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