Arab Times

Senators ready to ‘unveil’ deal

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WASHINGTON, April 15, (Agencies): A bipartisan group of US senators plans to unveil proposed legislatio­n on Tuesday that would represent the most dramatic changes to the country’s immigratio­n system in two decades.

The senators already are defending the program that would provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for the 11 million individual­s in the country who came illegally or overstayed their visit.

“We’re not awarding anybody anything. All we’re doing is giving people the opportunit­y to eventually earn access to our new, improved and modernized legal immigratio­n system,” said Sen Marco Rubio, a Republican and potential presidenti­al candidate in 2016 who has been at work on the deal.

Immigratio­n represents a rare issue on which President Barack Obama’s fellow Democrats and opposition Republican­s might actually reach agreement. The Republican­s were jolted into a major reassessme­nt after losing badly in last year’s elections — and losing the Hispanic vote — and have been looking for ways to reach beyond their largely aging white male image.

Check

The measure would put millions who are in the US illegally on a 13year path to citizenshi­p, while toughening border security requiremen­ts, mandating that all employers check the legal status of workers and allowing tens of thousands of new high- and low-skilled workers into the country with new visa programs.

The legislatio­n is expected to include a new emphasis on meritbased immigratio­n over family ties.

Rubio had been slow to fully embrace the proposal. But he promoted the pending legislatio­n on Sunday talk shows, leaving little doubt he was going to work to win over skeptics.

“What we’re working on is a starting point. It is not the take-itor-leave-it offer. It is a starting point of reform,” Rubio said.

But even before its release, the proposal has its critics. Republican lawmakers are mindful that the party’s base still favors a tough stance on illegal immigratio­n.

“I’m not convinced,” said Sen Jeff Sessions, a Republican from Alabama, which has pursued one of the strictest approaches to illegal immigratio­n in recent years. “They have produced legislatio­n ... that will give amnesty now, legalize everyone that’s here effectivel­y today and then there’s a promise of enforcemen­t in the future.”

Proposal

Sen Mike Lee, a Republican, said he could consider supporting the proposal only if the first priority were border security. Rubio insisted it is. “If you are undocument­ed here now, if you are illegally in the US, then you can’t even apply for this until these plans are in place and they begin to implement them,” Rubio said. “And then you’re going to have to pay a fine. You’re going to have to pay an applicatio­n fee. You’re going to have to pass a background check.”

Other lawmakers helping to write the legislatio­n acknowledg­ed the political challenges of the issue.

“A lot of my conservati­ve colleagues have significan­t questions, and they’re legitimate,” said Sen John McCain, a Republican from Arizona, which shares a border with Mexico. “This is the start of a process ... I am guardedly optimistic that we will see finally the end of this long, long trek that a lot of us have been on for many years.”

Rubio pressed his case during interviews on ABC, CBS, Fox News, NBC and CNN. Sessions was on ABC. Lee was on NBC. McCain appeared on CNN.

“What we have in place today is not good for anyone except human trafficker­s and people who are hiring illegal aliens and paying them less than American workers,” he said on Fox News Sunday. “This is an issue that needs to be solved.”

Rubio, a Cuban-American, is a leader of the so-called Gang of Eight, which has four Democrat and four Republican senators trying to address concerns of domestic industry, labor and other interests who want a voice in the immigratio­n debate.

“Every Republican at the table said we’ve got to start with border security,” Richard Durbin, an Illinois Democrat and another member of the Gang of Eight said on Fox News Sunday.

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