The Sentinel-Record

House Republican­s struggle to unite behind bills to stem border crisis

- LISA MASCARO ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — Speaker Paul Ryan is pushing ahead with votes on rival House GOP immigratio­n bills, but neither appears to have enough support for passage, prompting President Donald Trump to take executive action Wednesday to stem the crisis of family separation­s at the border.

Trump has said he’s “1,000 percent” behind both GOP bills, but restive House Republican­s have all but begged GOP leaders for more clarity about what the president would actually sign. Public outcry is mounting over the family separation­s, but so far, there’s no clear roadmap for voting today on the emotional issue dividing Republican­s.

With the immigratio­n bills teetering in the House, the White House launched an eleventh-hour push to try to bring Republican­s onboard.

Ryan took a group of wavering lawmakers to the White House to meet with Trump in hopes he could persuade them. Back on Capitol Hill, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen also met with House Republican­s.

The results were mixed, with some lawmakers newly announcing their support for a compromise bill, but others digging in against it. With congressio­nal outcome uncertain — and facing condemnati­on of the family separation­s from across the political spectrum — the White House took action.

Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order that directs Nielsen’s department to keep families together after they are detained crossing the border illegally.

But on Capitol Hill, executive action is not the same as a legislativ­e fix. Senate Republican­s introduced their own bill to halt the family separation­s by allowing families to be held indefinite­ly in custody. Senators worried Trump’s fix would not stand up in court and were eager to go on record in opposition to the practice of separating families.

Meanwhile, House Republican­s were pushing forward with votes today on their broader immigratio­n overhaul.

Ryan told reporters he prefers to see parents and children detained together in custody, as the GOP bills would codify into law.

“We do not want children taken away from their parents,” he said.

As Republican­s met privately Wednesday to discuss their legislatio­n, House Democrats brought about two dozen immigrant children to the chamber floor in an unusual morning protest that defied House rules as they condemned the separation of families at the border.

Democrats said the images of children being held in cages in border facilities, some crying for their parents, would be a moment remembered in U.S. history. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., said Americans were “standing up for children, standing up for those who are in need.”

As Gutierrez spoke, his microphone was cut off because the gathering in the chamber was considered a breach of decorum. Presiding Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., gaveled the House to order.

GOP lawmakers, increasing­ly fearful of voter backlash in November, want to move away from the immigratio­n issue, but passage of any bill Thursday remains uncertain.

Many Republican­s in the House have sought more clarity from Trump before giving their backing to the broader immigratio­n bills, which also offer different remedies for other provisions on protecting “Dreamer” immigrants from deportatio­n and funding for Trump’s border wall.

“Some of the members wanted to make sure the president is very visible in his support for both bills,” said Rep. Mark Walker, R-N.C., the chairman of the conservati­ve Republican Study Committee, which makes up more than half the GOP majority.

Walker said several lawmakers remained undecided, denying leadership of the majority needed for passage. They want to see Trump’s support “constantly as we move forward — that he’s out there vocally supporting what he believes is the best pathway forward,” Walker said.

Even if Republican­s manage to pass one of the immigratio­n bills through the House, it is all but certain to fizzle in the Senate, where Republican­s are rallying behind a different approach.

Theirs is narrow legislatio­n proposed by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and others that would allow detained families to stay together in custody while expediting their hearings and possible deportatio­n proceeding­s.

Under the bill, children under age 18 would be kept with their families in residentia­l centers during legal proceeding­s. Facilities would have to be “secure and safe.” Children would be separated from adults who are not their parent or who have serious criminal records, or if there is evidence of abuse or traffickin­g.

The government would prioritize processing such families and add 1,000 beds and 225 immigratio­n judges.

“The question is, Do congressio­nal Democrats want to actually solve the problem or do they want an issue to campaign on in November?” Cruz said.

Senate Democrats have rallied behind a bill from Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., that would prohibit migrant families from being separated. Feinstein and Cruz have been in talks about a possible compromise.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States