The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Voters hamper immigratio­n push

- By Alan Fram

Republican apprehensi­on over President Donald Trump’s next tweet and fear of riling conservati­ve voters are underminin­g GOP leaders’ election-year struggle to shove an immigratio­n bill through the House this week, leaving their prospects dubious.

Party leaders are trying to finally secure the votes they need for their wide-ranging bill with tweaks they hope will goose support from the GOP’s dueling conservati­ve and moderate wings. But more importantl­y, wavering Republican­s want Trump to provide political cover for immigratio­n legislatio­n that’s despised by hard-right voters. His recent statements on their bill and history of abruptly flip-flopping on past health care and spending measures have not been reassuring.

Last Tuesday, he privately told House Republican­s that he backed their legislatio­n “1,000 percent” and would protect them during their campaigns, lawmakers said. By Friday, he was tweeting that “Republican­s should stop wasting their time on Immigratio­n” and wait until after the November elections, when he said the GOP would approve tougher legislatio­n because it will gain strength in Congress. That propositio­n is dicey at best.

“I think that the best way to pass legislatio­n is to consistent­ly support a position and help move it forward,” Rep. Greg Walden of Oregon, a senior House Republican. Asked if Trump was doing that, Walden pivoted toward a door and said, “I’ll leave it at that.”

Rep. Mike McCaul, R-Texas, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said on “Fox News Sunday” that he talked to the White House on Saturday and “they say the president is still 100 percent behind us.”

The bill would make citizenshi­p a possibilit­y for “Dreamer” immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. when young. It would also finance Trump’s aspiration­al $25 billion wall with Mexico and curb government agencies from wrenching migrant children from detained parents.

The measure is the product of weeks of bargaining between party conservati­ves and moderates. Even so, the two GOP factions have been unable to resolve their final difference­s and vote-counters have yet to round up a majority. Republican­s are getting no help from Democrats, who uniformly oppose the legislatio­n.

The GOP divisions come at a bad time for the party: Elections are approachin­g and immigratio­n has riveted public attention for months. Republican­s who are battling to retain House control have hoped to focus this fall’s campaigns on the economy and tax cuts.

Instead, Republican blockades against ending deportatio­ns of young immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children were major news earlier this year. In recent days, the focus has shifted to the Trump administra­tion’s wrenching of migrant children from their parents.

Neither of those have been good looks for Republican­s from swing districts with large numbers of moderate voters — the very incumbents who must be re-elected for the GOP to retain House control.

Lawmakers said leaders wanted to round up GOP votes by adding provisions requiring companies to verify workers’ citizenshi­p, which conservati­ves like. They would also ease restrictio­ns on seasonal migrant workers, a priority for farmdistri­ct, moderate Republican­s.

Until now, party leaders have hesitated to include those items because they could end up costing votes, not gaining them. Moderate Republican­s don’t like the citizenshi­p verificati­on requiremen­t and some conservati­ves don’t like helping immigrants stay in the U.S.

Another problem is the two additional provisions don’t address the major reason for GOP defections: Conservati­ves say helping Dreamers stay in the U.S. is handing amnesty to lawbreaker­s.

“I’m a ‘no,’” said Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., a member of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus. He said he couldn’t defend helping the Dreamers “to people waiting in line the right way” to immigrate to the U.S.

The House defeated a more conservati­ve immigratio­n alternativ­e last week.

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 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, R-Wis., arrives for a news conference at the Capitol in Washington. House Republican­s say they will make another run at immigratio­n legislatio­n in the coming week, but the effort appears all but doomed after President Donald Trump said the bill was a waste of time with no chance of becoming law.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, R-Wis., arrives for a news conference at the Capitol in Washington. House Republican­s say they will make another run at immigratio­n legislatio­n in the coming week, but the effort appears all but doomed after President Donald Trump said the bill was a waste of time with no chance of becoming law.

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