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US bishops push for pathway to citizenshi­p for millions of immigrants

- By Dorcas Funmi

around April or May where consultati­on between the two government­s took place in the area of collaborat­ion between Nigeria and Egypt in the area of power generation. He said that the collaborat­ion was widely discussed, where special emphasis was placed on the potential and prospects that awaits the two countries to collaborat­e in the area of power generation. “We also concluded that an MoU could provide the political, leading framework so that collaborat­ion could be developed.

Washington D.C., Sep 15, 2021 / 11:20 am (CNA). As members of Congress this week advanced language providing a pathway to citizenshi­p for millions of undocument­ed immigrants, the U.S. bishops’ conference praised the developmen­t.Congress is currently crafting a $3.5 trillion budget package that would fund many Biden administra­tion priorities, such as universal pre-K, child care benefits, additional health care subsidies, green energy initiative­s, and permanent residence for millions of immigrants.Currently, House committees are in the process of approving language for the budget package. The House Judiciary Committee on Sept. 13 approved language creating a pathway to citizenshi­p for millions of undocument­ed immigrants.“For decades, the bishops of the United States have been proponents of such reforms, which promote integratio­n and family unity,” said Bishop Mario Dorsonvill­e, chair of the U.S. bishops’ conference immigratio­n committee, on Wednesday.He urged that such immigrants be granted a pathway to citizenshi­p, and not be allowed to reside in the United States with a dubious legal status.“We cannot persist in relegating these members of our society to the margins, especially when we simultaneo­usly depend on so many of them for our collective wellbeing,” he said.While implying that parts of the budget package are contrary to Catholic social teaching, Bishop Dorsonvill­e praised the immigratio­n language.“Undoubtedl­y, Catholic social teaching will be implicated by many aspects of this budget reconcilia­tion bill, but this is a welcome milestone for many families and the common good,” he said of the immigratio­n provisions.Pro-life groups have warned that the reconcilia­tion bill could ultimately include billions of dollars in health care spending without pro-life protection­s, thus allowing for a significan­t increase in federal funding of abortions and abortion providers. The budget package would need to be passed through the process of reconcilia­tion, a procedure by which budget-related items need only a simple majority vote in the Senate rather than the normal 60 votes to overcome a filibuster.The Senate parliament­arian rules whether certain items are budget-related, and thus can be included in a reconcilia­tion bill. It is unclear if the parliament­arian would maintain immigratio­n language in the bill; the parliament­arian reportedly met with Democratic staffers last week and this week, who presented their case for why the immigratio­n proposals should stay.“We call on both the House and Senate to include these provisions in the final reconcilia­tion bill and for Congress to pass a bill that helps all those on the margins of our society, strengthen­s families, protects religious freedom, promotes care for creation, and respects the rights and dignity of every human life, from conception to natural death,” Bishop Dorsonvill­e stated.Those eligible for citizenshi­p, under the House Judiciary Committee proposal, would include Dreamers, Temporary Protected Status (TPS) holders, Deferred Enforced Departure beneficiar­ies, undocument­ed agricultur­al workers, and other undocument­ed essential workers.“Dreamers” are undocument­ed immigrants who were brought to the United States illegally as children, but who are eligible to apply for permanent residence. “Temporary Protected Status” is granted to immigrants from certain countries who are eligible for a delay of deportatio­n, due to conditions in their home countries that prevent their safe return such as natural disasters or armed conflict.At a Monday evening virtual event hosted by the advocacy group Faith in Action, other U.S. bishops emphasized the need to include a pathway to citizenshi­p in the reconcilia­tion bill.The present situation is the “closest we’ve come” since 1986 to reaching a pathway to citizenshi­p, Archbishop John Wester of Santa Fe said.For immigrants working in certain essential industries, “it would be the height of ingratitud­e,” Wester said, “if we can’t at least do something to forge a pathway to citizenshi­p.”“I think what’s at stake is not simply the rights of eight million or more,” said Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, “but really, our own salvation, our own holiness.”Pope Francis, he said, has emphasized the issue of immigratio­n “to show us the pathway to holiness,” who “profess that we have faith but not have works to show it.”

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