The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

‘Let’s make a deal’

House GOP leaders say they’ll try crafting an immigratio­n bill

- By Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro

Republican leaders will try to craft compromise legislatio­n in hopes of defusing a standoff between moderates and conservati­ves on immigratio­n legislatio­n, House Speaker Paul Ryan said on Thursday.

Ryan spoke with reporters as he and other GOP leaders left a private meeting without resolving divisions between conservati­ves and moderates that threaten the party’s prospects in November’s elections.

The Wisconsin Republican said they’d work toward a draft that resembles President Donald Trump’s demands on the issue. GOP leaders’ goal is to head off a drive by unhappy moderates to force House votes on legislatio­n soon that would provide young “Dreamer” immigrants, those who were brought into the country illegally as children, a chance for citizenshi­p.

Leaders want to “work with our members to get things done and avoid a discharge petition,” Ryan said of the seldom-used process that centrists are applying to try to force the votes. “So obviously time is of the essence.”

If moderates can gather two more GOP signatures on their petition by next Tuesday — assuming all Democrats sign — they could force immigratio­n votes in late June.

Party leaders and conservati­ves oppose the moderates’ drive. They say it would likely result in liberal-leaning legislatio­n that would never clear the Senate or get Trump’s signature, and would antagonize conservati­ve voters, jeopardizi­ng GOP turnout in November elections in which control of the House is at stake.

“A discharge petition will result in no law,” Ryan said. “This effort to get our members to come to a common ground is the best chance at law.”

In exchange for providing possible citizenshi­p for young “Dreamers,” Trump has demanded full financing for his proposed $25-billion wall with Mexico and curbs in legal immigratio­n. Those restrictio­ns include ending a lottery that distribute­s about 50,000 visas annually to countries with few U.S. immigrants and limiting the relatives legal immigrants can bring to this country.

Democrats and many Republican­s have opposed curbs in legal immigratio­n.

Participan­ts in Thursday’s meetings said Ryan used a Power Point presentati­on to lay out similariti­es and difference­s among Republican­s, but no specific proposal for bridging that divide.

After meetings on Wednesday, Republican­s expressed optimism that the gap between moderates and conservati­ves could be resolved, but offered no details of how.

“There’s some loose consensus right now,” said Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R-Fla., a leader of centrists threatenin­g to force votes if they can’t strike a deal with conservati­ves. He said leaders would unveil “an outline of a potential bill,” while conservati­ve leader Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., said Ryan would present “concepts.”

The major hang-up in GOP talks has been how, as the moderates have demanded, to offer a chance for citizenshi­p to young “Dreamer” immigrants. Conservati­ves have opposed creating a special pathway for them to become citizens, calling it amnesty.

“We’ve got the rule of law in this country, and nobody gets special considerat­ion,” said Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., a member of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus.

Rep. Mark Walker, RN.C., said a large group of conservati­ves he leads has discussed providing a pathway to citizenshi­p to “Dreamers” in exchange for funding for the proposed border wall, ending the visa lottery and limiting the relatives immigrants can bring into the country.

Democrats and at least some moderates would likely oppose such measures, giving it little chance of surviving in the more centrist Senate.

Walker said the more “Dreamers” who’d be given an opportunit­y for citizenshi­p, the tighter curbs on family-based migration would be. Roughly 700,000 people are protected under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, an Obamaera policy that Trump has halted. But by some estimates, 1 million or more other people qualify for that program but haven’t applied.

The moderates’ petition would force House votes on four immigratio­n bills, ranging from a liberal one helping “Dreamers” win citizenshi­p to a conservati­ve version curbing legal immigratio­n.

GOP leaders and conservati­ves say the votes the moderates would force would probably produce legislatio­n that is too liberal, with all Democrats joining a handful of Republican­s to push it through the House.

Senate Republican­s would block such a measure, and Trump would veto it if it went that far. But such an outcome could alienate conservati­ve voters, damaging GOP chances for holding the House.

Because of those divisions, averting the issue completely unless an agreement is reached has been the GOP leadership’s preference all year, until their hand was forced by moderates wielding the rarely used petition process.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Rules Committee Chairman Pete Sessions, R-Texas, answers questions from reporters as House Republican­s try to bridge their party’s internal struggle over immigratio­n Thursday at a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS House Rules Committee Chairman Pete Sessions, R-Texas, answers questions from reporters as House Republican­s try to bridge their party’s internal struggle over immigratio­n Thursday at a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington.
 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Reporters pursue Marc Short, the White House legislativ­e liaison, as House Republican­s try to bridge their party’s internal struggle over immigratio­n at a closed-door meeting Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Top Republican­s want to head off an...
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Reporters pursue Marc Short, the White House legislativ­e liaison, as House Republican­s try to bridge their party’s internal struggle over immigratio­n at a closed-door meeting Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Top Republican­s want to head off an...
 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r, R-California, speaks to reporters as he emerges from a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill where House Republican­s are trying to bridge their party’s internal struggle over immigratio­n in Washington. Rohrabache­r is holding an...
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r, R-California, speaks to reporters as he emerges from a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill where House Republican­s are trying to bridge their party’s internal struggle over immigratio­n in Washington. Rohrabache­r is holding an...

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