The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

House rejects Republican immigratio­n bill, ignoring Trump

- By Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON » The Republican-led House resounding­ly rejected a far-ranging immigratio­n bill Wednesday despite an eleventh-hour endorsemen­t by President Donald Trump, as the gulf between the GOP’s moderate and conservati­ve wings proved too deep for leaders to avert an awkward electionye­ar display of division.

The bill was killed 301-121, with nearly half of Republican­s opposing the measure. The depth of GOP opposition was an embarrassi­ng showing for Trump and a rebuff of House leaders, who’d postponed the vote twice and proposed changes in hopes of driving up the tally for a measure that seemed doomed from the start.

The roll call seemed to empower GOP conservati­ves on the fraught issue. Last week a harder-right package was defeated but 193 Republican­s voted for it, 72 more than Wednesday’s total. In Wednesday’s vote, 112 Republican­s voted “no,” including many of the party’s most conservati­ve members.

“We need to start securing the border and not reward bad behavior, and that’s what this bill did,” said Rep. Roger Williams, R-Texas. Conservati­ves have opposed the bill’s provision offering a chance at citizenshi­p for hundreds of thousands of immigrants who came to the U.S. illegally as children. Calling it amnesty, they have said it doesn’t do enough to limit the number of relatives who immigrants here legally can sponsor for residence.

Even if it passed, the bill rejected Wednesday would have been dead on arrival in the closely divided Senate, where Democrats have enough votes to kill it. House Democrats voted unanimousl­y against it.

“Show some compassion,” said Rep. Adriano Espaillat, D-N.Y., who came to the U.S. from the Dominican Republic with his parents at age 9. “Will we step up to be the country that allowed me, as a young boy, to find safety with my mother and father?”

GOP leaders have been considerin­g a Plan B: a bill focused narrowly on barring the government from wresting children from migrant families caught entering the country without authorizat­ion. With television and social media awash with images

and wails of young children torn from parents, many Republican­s have wanted to pass a narrower measure addressing those separation­s before Congress leaves at week’s end for its July Fourth break.

But that seemed unlikely. GOP aides said Republican­s had yet to agree on bill language, and the effort was complicate­d by a federal judge who ordered that divided families be reunited with 30 days. Republican­s have been working on legislatio­n that would keep migrant families together by lifting a court-ordered, 20-day limit on how long families can be detained.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States