Baltimore Sun

How to solve the immigratio­n problem

- Carl P. Leubsdorf Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

A day after President Joe Biden’s much-publicized, long-delayed visit to the U.S.-Mexican border, a bipartisan Senate group made a less publicized visit that could ultimately have greater impact on easing the toxic immigratio­n problem.

The group, headed by Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., included several lawmakers who helped to pass last year’s bipartisan legislativ­e successes like the infrastruc­ture, CHIPS and gun safety bills.

Their approach provided a welcome contrast with the politics surroundin­g Biden’s recent announceme­nt of new border measures and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s denunciati­on of Sunday’s visit as a “stage-managed” photo-op.

Despite persistent political barriers, Cornyn expressed some optimism that a bipartisan deal on the long-stalemated issue was possible. But any effort needs to overcome the new House Republican majority’s focus on investigat­ing Biden’s border policies and strengthen­ing security, rather than seeking a broader solution.

“Most of the time when you come to the border, it’s kind of shirts vs. skins,” Cornyn told Punchbowl News’ Andrew Desiderio, who accompanie­d the group. “It’s all Republican­s and everybody’s sort of egging each other on but not actually trying to fix the problem.”

He said he was encouraged the group included Sinema and Connecticu­t Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy, who “have a history of doing bipartisan things and solving problems. So, I think that’s a great place to start.”

Actually, the starting point for any renewed legislativ­e effort is last year’s proposal by Sinema and North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis. Similar to prior bipartisan measures, it combined enhanced border security measures with a path to citizenshi­p for the Dreamers brought to this country illegally as children.

That is clearly the formula for getting something done legislativ­ely that could at least ease a problem that has bedeviled administra­tions of both parties. Strong feelings on both sides have killed all recent efforts.

In 2018, former President Donald

Trump discussed a package providing additional protection for the “Dreamers” and funding for his controvers­ial border wall at a White House meeting with senators from both parties. But Trump’s hardline advisers persuaded him to reject the plan.

And in 2013, the Senate actually passed a bipartisan bill to add up to 40,000 border patrol agents, revise the visa system to encourage entry of skilled workers, and provide a path to legal status and ultimately citizenshi­p for many of the 11 million undocument­ed workers in the United States.

At the time, many analysts thought some form of that measure could also command a bipartisan House majority. But Republican Speaker John Boehner of Ohio —heeding the views of GOP hard-liners — invoked his party’s policy of only considerin­g measures with support from a majority from the GOP.

That could be a barrier again in the new Republican-controlled House. Speaker Kevin McCarthy of California said last June that any measure offering “amnesty” to those here illegally “is a nonstarter. It won’t be taken up by a House Republican majority.”

The new House will consider several enforcemen­t measures under the rules package it approved Monday, Forbes reported. They include bills to “authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to suspend the entry of aliens” and require the FBI to alert Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and state and local enforcemen­t officials whenever anyone here illegally tries to buy a firearm.

According to Sinema, the bipartisan group hopes to broaden a House-passed border security bill into a more comprehens­ive measure that could get the 60 votes needed to pass the Senate. That might depend on whether it secures support from GOP Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who was crucial in last year’s enactment of bipartisan bills.

While that’s theoretica­lly possible, it won’t solve the problem of potential House rejection of — or even debate on

— a comprehens­ive bill, despite the GOP majority’s avowed new goal of allowing more open debates.

Meanwhile, Biden’s latest effort to deal with the thousands of asylum-seekers who have been overwhelmi­ng border crossing points has drawn a mixed reaction, underscori­ng the difficulty of finding compromise solutions to the complex problem.

His plan will admit up to 30,000 monthly from Haiti, Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela if they apply from their home countries and have financial supporters in the United States. It will also use Title 42, the Trump administra­tion’s COVID19-era

measure to block potential entrants on health grounds, to return up to 30,000 asylum-seekers to Mexico.

Migrants seeking asylum on humanitari­an grounds will need to submit proof of an eligible sponsor and pass background checks before being allowed to travel elsewhere in the United States. And Biden will provide additional resources to stressed border agencies.

Immigrant rights groups condemned the continued enforcemen­t of Title 42, pending a ruling on its legality expected this spring from the Supreme Court, while Republican­s condemned Biden’s moves as too little too late.

Abbott, who has stationed National Guard troops and Public Safety officers on the border and taken other measures to block migrants, presented Biden in El Paso Sunday with a letter declaring that “chaos” there “is the direct result of your failure to enforce the immigratio­n laws that Congress enacted.” He demanded the president end “the practice of unlawfully paroling aliens en masse,” “aggressive­ly prosecute illegal entry between ports of entry” and resume constructi­on of Trump’s wall.

Efforts to pass bipartisan immigratio­n legislatio­n have failed for more than 30 years. But the situation on the Southern border demands that compromise-minded lawmakers like Cornyn and Sinema keep trying.

According to Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, the bipartisan group hopes to broaden a House-passed border security bill into a more comprehens­ive measure that could get the 60 votes needed to pass the Senate.

 ?? RANDY HOEFT/THE YUMA SUN ?? Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, left, and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., visited the southern border earlier this week.
RANDY HOEFT/THE YUMA SUN Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, left, and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., visited the southern border earlier this week.
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