The Sentinel-Record

GOP savors seeing House Dems oppose own immigratio­n bill

- ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — Abolishing the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency is a trendy battle cry for liberals. Republican­s like it too, but think a better use for the proposal is to cause campaign-season headaches for Democrats.

A day after a handful of House progressiv­es introduced legislatio­n to erase the federal agency, GOP lawmakers on Friday were considerin­g scheduling a vote on the effort. That would force Democrats to take a stand on a proposal many of them would rather avoid because either way, they risk alienating voters.

The bill has no chance of passage by the Republican-dominated chamber. It was unclear if the vote, if held, would be on the Democratic legislatio­n or a similar measure.

In hopes of blunting GOP efforts to embarrass and divide them, Democrats said Friday they would oppose their own legislatio­n en masse if Republican­s forced a vote. One top Republican essentiall­y said that was fine with him.

“How would they go back home and explain how they voted against a bill that they filed?” No. 3 GOP leader Steve Scalise, R-La., told a reporter. “People are tired of them talking out of both sides of their mouths. If they’re really for abolishing ICE, they ought to explain why, they ought to be proud of it.”

Republican­s see the proposal as a chance to cast Democrats as soft on border security. A vote could also give them a political counterwei­ght to the unremittin­g images of young migrant children torn from their seized parents.

For many liberals and party activists, ICE has become an emblem of President Donald Trump’s forceful efforts to divide migrant families and remove immigrants who arrived here illegally.

The idea of erasing the agency has gained resonance among Democrats since political neophyte Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez used it while ousting 10-term veteran Rep. Joe Crowley in a party primary last month. Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., two potential 2020 president contenders, have also embraced the idea.

Even so, backers of the bill said they and other Democrats would oppose it because Republican­s were using it to score political points.

“We will not fall victim to a cheap political trick,” said Rep. Adriano Espaillat, D-N.Y., a sponsor. He said Democrats would use the debate to train attention on the thousands of children taken from migrant parents under Trump’s now discarded policy of separating detained families.

Many Democrats would prefer to not vote on the liberals’ bill

at all. Voting for it could make Democrats vulnerable to GOP charges that they want to dismantle an important law enforcemen­t agency, but opposing it risks angering liberal constituen­ts.

“Call the administra­tion out for a policy that is failing and just ripping families apart,” said Rep. Kathleen Rice, D-N.Y. “Anytime you propose something that is extreme, which I think this is, you’re not talking about the real issues here. There’s a lot of stuff ICE does that keeps us safe.”

The bill would create a commission to assign ICE’s duties to other agencies. ICE would cease to exist within a year.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., would not say Friday whether there will be a vote. Scalise and other leaders referred questions about the decision to McCarthy.

“When I announce my schedule, you guys can see it,” McCarthy said.

More than 50 Republican­s have also signed onto a symbolic measure by Rep. Clay Higgins, R-La., saying abolishing ICE would let “dangerous criminal aliens” enter the U.S., mean open borders and insult “heroic law enforcemen­t officers.”

It was unclear where the idea of using abolishing ICE against Democrats came from. Two Republican aides said Scalise raised the idea with colleagues this week, but others said the impetus came from McCarthy. The Republican­s spoke on condition of anonymity to describe closeddoor conversati­ons.

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