The Sentinel-Record

Trump, GOP leaders strain for migrant-children solution

- LISA MASCARO ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — Republican lawmakers and President Donald Trump searched anxiously Tuesday evening for a way to end the administra­tion’s policy of separating families after illegal border crossings, with their focus shifting to a new plan to keep children in detention longer than now permitted — but with their parents.

GOP House leaders, increasing­ly fearful of voter reaction in November, met with Trump for about an hour at the Capitol to try to work out some resolution.

“We had a great meeting,” he called out as he left, but he gave no other informatio­n on possible progress.

Leaders in both the House and Senate are struggling to shield the party’s lawmakers from the public outcry over images of children taken from migrant parents and held in cages at the border. But they are running up against Trump’s shifting views on specifics and his determinat­ion, according to advisers, not to look soft on immigratio­n or his signature border wall.

Many lawmakers say he could simply reverse the administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy and keep families together. But some worry he could also inject a new dynamic, rejecting emerging GOP proposals and potentiall­y exacerbati­ng an already tough situation as his party heads toward difficult midterm elections.

As Trump entered the Capitol basement for the closed-door session, he told reporters, “The system has been broken for many years, the immigratio­n system. … We’re going to try and see if we can fix it.”

At an earlier event Tuesday, Trump said he was asking Congress for “the legal authority to detain and promptly remove families together as a unit.” He said it was “the only solution to the bor-

der crisis.”

House GOP leaders are scrambling to revise their broader current immigratio­n bill to include a provision to resolve the situation.

The major change being unveiled Tuesday would loosen rules that now limit the amount of time minors can be held to 20 days, according to a GOP source familiar with the measure. Instead, the children could be detained with their parents for extended periods.

The revised provision would also give Department of Homeland Security the authority to use

$7 billion in border technology funding to pay for family detention centers, said the person, who was not authorized to do so by name and commented only on condition of anonymity.

In the Senate, meanwhile, Republican­s are rallying behind a different approach. Theirs is narrow legislatio­n proposed by Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas that would allow detained families to stay together in custody while expediting their deportatio­n proceeding­s.

Cruz’s bill would double the number of federal immigratio­n judges, authorize new temporary shelters to house migrant families and limit the processing of asylum cases to no more than 14 days — a goal immigrant advocates say would be difficult to meet.

“While cases are pending, families should stay together,” tweeted Cruz, who is in an unexpected­ly tough re-election battle.

The second-ranking Senate Republican, John Cornyn of Texas, said they’re proposing a “humane, safe and secure family facility” where parents and minor children could be detained together. He said families would move to the head of the line for processing.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters he’s reaching out to Democrats for bipartisan backing, since the proposal would need to reach a

60-vote threshold to advance in that chamber.

But Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York signaled that no such support would be coming, saying it’s already in Trump’s power to keep the families together.

“There’s no need for legislatio­n. There’s no need for anything else. You can do it. Mr. President you started it, you can stop it.”

However, Trump, who has been watching the coverage play out on television with increasing anger, has told confidants he believes the news media are deliberate­ly highlighti­ng the worst images — like the cages and screaming toddlers — to make him look bad

To combat worries that he looks “soft” on immigratio­n, Trump unleashed a series of tweets in which he played up the dangers posed by the high-profile MS-13 gangs, which make up a minuscule percentage of those who have crossed the border. He uses the word “infest” to describe migrants coming to the U.S. illegally.

Trump’s meeting at the Capitol comes as lawmakers in both parties are up in arms after days of news reports with images of children confined in large wire cages and an audio recording of a young child pleading for his “Papa.”

The issue boiled over Tuesday at a House hearing on an unrelated subject when protesters with babies briefly shut down proceeding­s.

Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings, the top Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, pleaded with Republican­s on the panel “to stand up to President Donald Trump.”

Under the administra­tion’s current policy, all unlawful crossings are referred for prosecutio­n — a process that moves adults to the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service and sends many children to facilities run by the Department of Health and Human Services. Under the Obama administra­tion, such families were usually referred for civil deportatio­n proceeding­s, not requiring separation.

More than 2,300 minors were separated from their children at the border from May 5 through June 9, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

The national outcry has roiled midterm election campaigns, emboldenin­g Democrats while putting Republican­s on the defensive.

Top conservati­ves, including key Trump allies, have introduced bills to keep the migrant families together. Rep. Mark Meadows of North Carolina, a leader of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus, called his measure “becomes a backup proposal” if others fail.

The House is to vote later this week on two bills that address broader immigratio­n issues to protect young immigrant “Dreamers” from deportatio­n and fund Trump’s border wall.

But outlook for passage is dim. One conservati­ve measure is expected to fail. And the compromise legislatio­n that GOP leaders helped negotiate with moderate Republican­s is given little chance, too.

The White House, after saying it would accept only a comprehens­ive fix, reversed course Tuesday and said it was reviewing the Cruz bill.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? SUPPORT AND SYMPATHY: Lucy Martin and her daughter Branwen Espinal together with other mothers and their babies, attend a House Committee on the Judiciary and House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform hearing, to express their support and sympathy to immigrants and their families and objection to the forced separation of migrant children from their parents, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.
The Associated Press SUPPORT AND SYMPATHY: Lucy Martin and her daughter Branwen Espinal together with other mothers and their babies, attend a House Committee on the Judiciary and House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform hearing, to express their support and sympathy to immigrants and their families and objection to the forced separation of migrant children from their parents, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.

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