The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

GOP moderates fall to Trumpism on immigratio­n

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“Moderate Republican­s are the people who are there when you don’t need them.”

It was one of former Rep. Barney Frank’s many devastatin­g zingers, and it certainly applies to the fiasco unfolding in the House of Representa­tives on immigratio­n.

A headline last week on Roll Call’s website might have been channeling Frank, the acerbic Massachuse­tts Democrat: “Moderates Punt on Immigratio­n Petition as GOP Goals Drift.”

Drift indeed. What we saw last week embodied the spirit of capitulati­on that has allowed a once-great party to move toward the extremism and irrational­ity represente­d by President Trump. As recently as 2007, a significan­t share of the GOP, led by former President George W. Bush himself, sought a humane answer to the problem of illegal immigratio­n.

Now, the party of family values is caught up in the forcible separation of children from their parents. Members of the GOP, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, try to rationaliz­e the spectacle of kids torn away from their moms and dads at the border by blaming court decisions or (in Trump’s case) Democrats.

Thus do Republican­s compound their inhumanity with a lie. The only reason this is happening is because of Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ decision to incarcerat­e those who enter the country illegally and to take their young children away on the that’ll-teach-’em theory.

Sessions has spoken of this thuggishne­ss with pride. He is, you see, creating a new incentive. “If you don’t want your child separated,” he said last month, “then don’t bring them across the border illegally.” This is cruelty by design.

The Republican­s who purport to be above Trumpian nativism briefly threatened to show some spine by taking a stand in defense of immigrants brought to the United States without authorizat­ion when they were children. Referred to as Dreamers, they are functional­ly American in every way except in their legal status.

Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R-Fla., organized what is known as a discharge petition to force votes on a series of immigratio­n bills. One of them was a clean effort to give the Dreamers a path to citizenshi­p that was favored to pass if it got a vote. Every one of the 193 Democrats in the House signed the petition and so did 23 Republican­s. It needed only two more GOP signatures to force action.

And on the cusp of victory, the so-called moderates caved in to Ryan. The last two endorsemen­ts would never come.

Their retreat means that Ryan can bring two bills to the floor this week, a hardline proposal from Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., likely to fail; and a policy mishmash that would achieve many of Trump’s goals — although Trump briefly embarrasse­d Ryan on Friday by saying he’d veto the socalled compromise before he reversed himself later that afternoon.

While offering a less generous approach to the Dreamers’ problem, that second bill would also provide billions for Trump’s “beautiful wall,” a series of new restrictio­ns on legal immigratio­n, and tougher rules for asylum seekers.

Its “solution” to the family separation debacle would be to end court-mandated legal protection­s for children brought across the border so entire families could be jailed together. Now there’s humanity for you.

Last week, South Carolina state legislator Katie Arrington ousted stoutly conservati­ve U.S. Rep. Mark Sanford in a Republican primary by arguing that he was insufficie­ntly loyal to the president. Arrington proudly declared: “We are the party of President Donald J. Trump.”

She’s right. And those Republican­s who still proclaim their allegiance to moderation and civility lack the gumption to do anything about it.

 ??  ?? EJ Dionne Columnist
EJ Dionne Columnist

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