The Palm Beach Post

Congress OKs budget deal, gears for immigratio­n fight

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — They can all claim wins in the big budget agreement: President Donald Trump, congressio­nal Republican­s and Democrats, too. Next up, however, is a Senate immigratio­n battle that may well lead nowhere, complicate­d by divisions within parties rubbed raw by the spending pact plus election-year pressures that always make compromise challengin­g.

In Washington’s latest display of governance by brinkmansh­ip, a bipartisan accord bolstering military and domestic programs by $400 billion and deepening federal deficits became law Friday — but not before the government technicall­y shut down.

In what amounts to an achieve-

ment these days, lawmakers limited the overnight closure to less than nine hours — the time between when agencies technicall­y ran out of money at midnight and Trump’s morning signing of the bill. It was the government’s second shutdown in three weeks, following January’s three-day closure when Senate Democrats demanding legislatio­n shielding young “Dreamer” immigrants from deportatio­n blocked a bill keeping agencies open.

Paul stalls vote

This time, Senate passage was delayed until after midnight when Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., stalled the vote to protest Congress’ willingnes­s to drive up deficits. Paul said he hoped his stand would teach conservati­ves “to not accept just anything because it comes from a GOP Congress,” but House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., called the brief shutdown “entirely needless.” The budget measure provides Pentagon spending increases sought by Trump and the GOP, more money for domestic agencies demanded by Democrats and bil$89 lion that both wanted for disaster relief. The two-year pact, which also continues the government’s authority to borrow money, postpones any possible federal default or likely shutdown until after the November elections. But the 652-page budget bill says nothing about protecting the Dreamer immigrants, and that largely explains why a quarter of Senate Democrats and a third of House Democrats voted no. Passage left Democrats with little leverage to force congressio­nal action on preventing deportatio­n of hundreds of thousands of the young immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children and remain here without permanent legal protection. “Democrats have fought hard but, in the end, many opted to say yes to other priorities and leave Dreamers

‘Democrats ... opted to say yes to other priorities.’ Frank Sharry Pro-immigratio­n leader

behind,” said Frank Sharry, executive director of the pro-immigratio­n America’s Voice. He called that decision plus opposition by many Republican­s “inhumane and indecent.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., set Feb. 19 as the start of a free-wheeling immigratio­n battle, a debate he promised when Democrats agreed to vote to reopen the government last month. Ryan hasn’t scheduled House considerat­ion, infuriatin­g Democrats, but he said Friday, “We will focus on bringing that debate to this floor and finding a solution.” Democrats want to extend the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that lets the immigrants temporaril­y live and work in the U.S. but that Trump would end March 5. The Democrats also want to make the immigrants eligible for citizenshi­p or permanent residence. In excha n ge, Trump wants $25 billion to build his beloved U.S.-Mexico bor- der wall and other barriers. He also wants reductions in legal immigratio­n, including limiting the relatives whom legal residents can sponsor and eliminatin­g a lottery that offers visas to residents of diverse countries. There’s no obvious compromise that could win the 60 votes from Republican­s and Democrats needed to prevail in the Senate. The most promising outcome may be a narrow bill extending DACA protection­s for a year or so and providing some border security money for Trump.

Defeat for Democrats

Whatever happens, this week’s budget battle dealt a clear immigratio­n defeat to Democrats, who initially vowed to block spending bills until there was a deal to help the Dreamers. The setback left party members divided. No. 2 Senate Democratic leader Richard Durbin of Illinois, a leader in the immigratio­n fight, said the budget pact “opens the door” for Senate votes on protecting the young immigrants. But Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., said anyone supporting the spending measure was “colluding with this president and this administra­tion to deport Dreamers.” Such disputes won’t help the party energize the His- panic and liberal voters it will need as it tries to capture House and perhaps Senate control in the November elections. Immigratio­n divides Republican­s, too. Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona is preparing compromise­s to offer during his chamber’s upcoming debate and says his party will suffer in November if the issue isn’t addressed. No. 3 House GOP leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana says Republican­s still disagree about “how to handle this number of people that Barack Obama encouraged to come in here illegally.” With the immigratio­n fight looming, Congress voted overnight to finance the government through March 23, giving budget-writers time to craft detailed legislatio­n funding agencies through the rest of this fiscal year. The House voted 240-186 to approve the bill just before dawn, hours after the Senate approved the measure 71-28, with some of Congress’ most conservati­ve and liberal lawmakers voting no. Trump signed it as business hours began, and he couldn’t resist a dig. “This Bill is a BIG VICTORY for our Military, but much waste in order to get Dem votes,” he tweeted. “Fortunatel­y, DACA not included in this Bill, negotiatio­ns to start now!”

 ?? AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (left), D-N.Y., and Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., leave McConnell’s office Wednesday after budget discussion­s on Capitol Hill. Congress finally reached a deal early Friday.
AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (left), D-N.Y., and Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., leave McConnell’s office Wednesday after budget discussion­s on Capitol Hill. Congress finally reached a deal early Friday.

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