The Sentinel-Record

GOP postpones vote on immigratio­n bill

- LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON — The House Republican immigratio­n overhaul dangled precarious­ly Thursday, imperiled by stubborn difference­s between conservati­ve and moderate factions — and by President Donald Trump’s running commentary about a bill he only half-heartedly supported and then suggested would never become law.

Republican leaders were twice forced to postpone final voting, first until today and then punting it to next week, as negotiator­s made a last-ditch push for support. They were trying to persuade colleagues to seize the moment and tackle immigratio­n problems by approving the bill, which includes $25 billion for Trump’s border wall and a path to citizenshi­p for young immigrants who have lived in the U.S. illegally since childhood.

House Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana said Thursday evening they would keep trying to find consensus on the legislatio­n.

Earlier in the day, Speaker Paul Ryan had appeared resigned to defeat, instead holding out hope that the compromise negotiated among the Republican House majority could sow the seeds for an eventual resolution.

“I actually think we’re advancing the cause even if something doesn’t necessaril­y pass,” he said. “I think we’re making advancemen­ts.”

And they weren’t ready to give up.

GOP lawmakers leaving a two-hour closed-door meeting said there were plans to add two provisions to the sweeping legislatio­n to attract more backing.

One would require employers to use an online system to verify the citizenshi­p of their workers, which could attract conservati­ves. The other would make it easier for employers to retain migrant workers, which could bolster support from Republican­s from agricultur­al regions. Legislatio­n on those issues had been promised for July, but skeptical lawmakers

wanted it done sooner.

The turmoil among Republican­s over the bill, hardened in recent days by heart-wrenching images from the crisis at the border — with families separated and young immigrants kept in fenced holding areas — showcased the limits of a go-it-alone GOP immigratio­n strategy.

Republican­s have never been able to pass a big immigratio­n overhaul on their own, despite talking about the issue for years. The potential collapse of their latest effort underscore­s the reality that it probably will require bipartisan consensus to find immigratio­n solutions, even as Republican­s control both Congress and the White House.

Trump acknowledg­ed as much. “We need two to tango,” he said at the White House.

His offhand comments, coming before votes were cast Thursday, hardly helped an already tenuous situation. Maybe he should invite Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer to the White House, he suggested.

“We should be able to do a bill. I’d invite them to come to the White House any time they want. This afternoon would be good,” Trump said. The Democratic leaders did not arrive.

In fact, the Democrats showed no interest in helping the Republican­s without fundamenta­l changes to include their own priorities.

“It is not a compromise,” said House Minority Leader Pelosi. “It may be a compromise with the devil, but it is not a compromise with the Democrats.”

Rather than help push the bill to the finish line, Trump’s mixed messages reinforced his role as an unreliable partner for House Republican­s in the immigratio­n debate. First, he had distanced himself from the negotiatio­ns. Then, he interjecte­d that he didn’t like what they came up with. Then he reversed course and said he would back the compromise — as well as a more conservati­ve measure that went down to defeat earlier Thursday.

But then he tweeted on Thursday that whatever passed in the House was surely dead in the Senate because Republican­s have just 51 votes, not nearly enough to clear the 60-vote threshold to get past a Democratic filibuster.

“What is the purpose of the House doing good immigratio­n bills when you need 9 votes by Democrats in the Senate, and the Dems are only looking to Obstruct (which they feel is good for them in the Mid-Terms),” Trump tweeted.

That comment came just two days after the president swooped into the Capitol to endorse the bills.

Fence-sitting Republican­s or those otherwise opposed to the legislatio­n said they felt little pressure to come on board the compromise bill or a measure favored by conservati­ves that was defeated on Thursday.

“I’m not spending my political capital or my brain cells on these two bills,” said conservati­ve Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, opposes both.

The House voted 231-193 to defeat the more conservati­ve version that would have authorized border wall funds but not a path to citizenshi­p for the young immigrants. All Democrats and 41 Republican­s opposed the legislatio­n.

Meanwhile, the compromise measure remained in limbo. Rep. Randy Weber, R-Texas, a member of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus, said, “I’m thinking we’re banging our head against the wall and it’s not even built yet.”

Other Republican­s, though, particular­ly moderates who forced the immigratio­n issue to the fore, pushed on, trying to persuade their colleagues not to let this chance slip away. Many come from states with large immigrant population­s now at risk of deportatio­n after Trump ended the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. The program is temporaril­y still in effect, pending further federal court action.

“This is the most consensus bill you can get on a contentiou­s issue,” said Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y. He said if Republican­s can’t get it done, “you end up looking like the gang that can’t shoot straight.”

But a small group of influentia­l moderates was also feeling burned after long negotiatio­ns with conservati­ves in the House Freedom Caucus and the Republican Study Committee, which make up the bulk of the GOP majority and appeared poised to abandon the compromise.

Rep. Carlos Curbelo, a leading GOP moderate from Florida, shouted on the House floor about the inability of his colleagues to accept the deal.

“That’s the problem with immigratio­n, nothing’s ever good enough.”

Rep. Jeff Denham of California, a champion of the compromise, complained as he left a meeting with all the groups in the speaker’s office: “The goal posts have continued to move throughout the entire negotiatio­ns.”

He said, “There’s only one way that this bill goes down today and that’s if the Freedom Caucus votes against the measures that they put into the bill.”

But Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina, head of the Republican Study Committee, called the compromise “toxic” and urged a oneweek delay in voting.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? SEEKING CONSENSUS: Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., center, chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, flanked by Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga., and Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, talk Thursday before a series of votes in the House at the Capitol in Washington.
The Associated Press SEEKING CONSENSUS: Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., center, chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, flanked by Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga., and Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, talk Thursday before a series of votes in the House at the Capitol in Washington.

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